Anaplastic Thyroid Carcinoma: Expression Profile of Targets for Therapy Offers New Insights for Disease Treatment
- 10 November 2006
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Annals of Surgical Oncology
- Vol. 14 (2) , 719-729
- https://doi.org/10.1245/s10434-006-9178-6
Abstract
Anaplastic thyroid cancer is an endocrine malignancy. Its rare and rapidly lethal disease course has made it challenging to study. Little is known regarding the expression by anaplastic tumors of molecular targets for new human anticancer agents that have been studied in the preclinical or clinical setting. The objective of this work was to evaluate the expression profile of anaplastic thyroid tumors for molecular targets for treatment. Of the 94 cases of anaplastic thyroid cancers diagnosed and treated in British Columbia, Canada over a 20-year period (1984–2004), 32 cases (34%) had adequate archival tissue available for evaluation. A tissue microarray was constructed from these anaplastic thyroid tumors and immunohistochemistry was utilized to evaluate expression of 31 molecular markers. The markers evaluated were: epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), HER2, HER3, HER4, ER, PR, uPA-R, clusterin, E-cadherin, β-catenin, AMF-R, c-kit, VEGF, ILK, aurora A, aurora B, aurora C, RET, CA-IX, IGF1-R, p53, MDM2, p21, Bcl-2, cyclin D1, cyclin E, p27, calcitonin, MIB-1, TTF-1, and thyroglobulin. A single tumor with strong calcitonin expression was identified as a poorly differentiated medullary carcinoma and excluded from the study cohort. The mean age of the anaplastic cohort was 66 years; 16 patients (51%) were females, and the median patient survival was 23 weeks. A wide range in molecular marker expression was observed by the anaplastic thyroid cancer tumors (0–100%). The therapeutic targets most frequently and most strongly overexpressed by the anaplastic tumors were: β-catenin (41%), aurora A (41%), cyclin E (67%), cyclin D1 (77%), and EGFR (84%). Anaplastic thyroid tumors exhibit considerable derangement of their cell cycle and multiple signal transduction pathways that leads to uncontrolled cellular proliferation and the development of genomic instability. This report is the first to comprehensively evaluate a panel of molecular targets for therapy of anaplastic thyroid cancer and supports the development of clinical trials with agents such as cetuximab, small-molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors, and aurora kinase inhibitors, which may offer new hope for individuals diagnosed with this fatal thyroid malignancy.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Anaplastic Thyroid Carcinoma: Biology, Pathogenesis, Prognostic Factors, and Treatment ApproachesAnnals of Surgical Oncology, 2006
- Antibody-Based Therapies for Colorectal CancerThe Oncologist, 2005
- Current Knowledge and Future Directions of the Selective Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Inhibitors Erlotinib (Tarceva®) and Gefitinib (Iressa®)The Oncologist, 2005
- The Current Situation: Erlotinib (Tarceva®) and Gefitinib (Iressa®) in Non-Small Cell Lung CancerThe Oncologist, 2005
- Anaplastic (undifferentiated) thyroid cancer: improved insight and therapeutic strategy into a highly aggressive diseaseThe Journal of Laryngology & Otology, 2005
- Combined treatment of anaplastic thyroid carcinoma with surgery, chemotherapy, and hyperfractionated accelerated external radiotherapyInternational Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, 2004
- Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma: three protocols combining doxorubicin, hyperfractionated radiotherapy and surgeryBritish Journal of Cancer, 2002
- HER (erbB) tyrosine kinase inhibitors in the treatment of breast cancerSeminars in Oncology, 2002
- Assessment of Interlaboratory Variation in the Immunohistochemical Determination of Estrogen Receptor Status Using a Breast Cancer Tissue MicroarrayAmerican Journal of Clinical Pathology, 2002
- Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma: A therapeutic challengeSeminars in Surgical Oncology, 1999