Researchers identify genetic markers for
aggressive Head and Neck Cancer
Newswise — Scientists at Albert Einstein
College of Medicine of Yeshiva University
have identified genetic markers that signal
poor outcomes for patients with head and
neck cancer.
These findings could one day lead to a
genetic test that could help select or
predict successful treatment options for
patients with this type of cancer. The
results were published in the American
Journal of Pathology.
Head and neck cancer refers to tumors in the
mouth, throat or larynx (voice box).
Each
year, about 40,000 men and women in the U.S.
develop head and neck cancer, making it the
sixth most common cancer in the U.S.
Surgery, chemotherapy and/or radiation are
the main treatment options but cause serious
side effects: surgery may involve removing
large areas of the tongue, throat, or neck
and can affect appearance, and any type of
therapy can cause swallowing or speech
problems that can significantly affect
quality of life. Despite curative treatment
attempts, on average only about half of
patients survive beyond five years after
treatment.
This is greatly affected by the size and
location of the tumor.
The Einstein study focuses on microRNAs, a
recently identified class of short RNA
molecules that play key roles in regulating
gene expression. Abnormal microRNA levels
have been associated with all types of
cancer yet examined.
In previous research, the Einstein
scientists and other groups reported that
approximately 50 specific microRNAs were
expressed at higher or lower levels in head
and neck tumor cell lines compared with
normal cells.
In this study, the Einstein researchers, for
the first time, have linked levels of
specific microRNAs with tumor recurrence and
poorer survival in head and neck cancer.
The Einstein team analyzed samples from 104
head and neck cancer patients from
Montefiore Medical Center, The University
Hospital and Academic Medical Center for
Einstein. The patients were treated and
followed over five years.
At the time of cancer diagnosis and before
any therapy, researchers removed samples
tumor tissue from patients, as well as
normal tissue adjacent to their tumor, and
measured microRNA levels in the two types of
tissue.
Patients who fared worst had the lowest
levels of two particular microRNAs
─
miR-205 and let-7d
─
in their tumor tissue. Specifically, these
patients were four times more likely to have
an earlier metastasis or local-regional
recurrence of their cancer than patients
with higher levels of miR-205 and let-7d in
tumor tissue.
These findings may eventually be put to
practical use, allowing physicians to
identify potentially aggressive head and
neck cancers and choose the most appropriate
treatment.
“A biologic marker identifying aggressive
tumors would allow us to direct therapy more
appropriately, minimizing over or
under-treatment,” explained Richard Smith,
M.D., the lead clinician on the paper.
Dr. Smith is associate professor of clinical
otorhinolaryngology-head & neck surgery and
associate professor of surgery at Einstein,
and vice-chair of otorhinolaryngology-head &
neck surgery at Einstein and Montefiore.
“In addition, these molecules, or modified
forms of these molecules, can potentially be
used in treatment because their small size
allows them to be reintroduced into cells
with the possibility of altering the
behavior of a tumor,” says Geoffrey Childs,
Ph.D., professor of pathology at Einstein
and corresponding author of the article.
“Our next steps are to confirm these results
in a new patient population and to find
additional markers that would allow us to
develop a reproducible and accurate
prognostic test,” explained Nicolas Schlecht,
Ph.D., assistant professor of epidemiology
and population health, and of medicine at
Einstein. Dr. Schlecht is also the Miriam
Mandel faculty scholar in cancer research
and a senior author of the paper.
Other Einstein and Montefiore faculty
members involved in this study were Melissa
Fazzari, Margaret Brandwein-Gensler, Quan
Chen, Robert Burk, Michael Prystowsky and
Thomas Belbin.
The paper titled “Low-Level Expression of
MicroRNAs let-7d and miR-205 are Prognostic
Markers of Head and Neck Squamos Cell
Carcinoma” appeared in the March 2009 issue
of the American Journal of Pathology and can
be found at:
http://ajp.amjpathol.org/
About Albert Einstein
College of Medicine of Yeshiva University
Albert Einstein College of Medicine of
Yeshiva University is one of the nation’s
premier centers for research, medical
education and clinical investigation.
It is the home to some 2,000 faculty
members, 750 M.D. students, 350 Ph.D.
students (including 125 in combined
M.D./Ph.D. programs) and 380 postdoctoral
investigators.
Last year, Einstein received more than $130
million in support from the NIH. This
includes the funding of major research
centers at Einstein in diabetes, cancer,
liver disease, and AIDS.
Other areas where the College of Medicine is
concentrating its efforts include
developmental brain research, neuroscience,
cardiac disease, and initiatives to reduce
and eliminate ethnic and racial health
disparities.
Through its extensive affiliation network
involving five hospital centers in the
Bronx, Manhattan and Long Island – which
includes Montefiore Medical Center, The
University Hospital and Academic Medical
Center for Einstein – the College runs one
of the largest post-graduate medical
training program in the United States,
offering approximately 150 residency
programs to more than 2,500 physicians in
training. For more information, please visit
www.aecom.yu.edu.