Circulating cell-free miR-375 as surrogate marker of tumor burden in Merkel cell carcinoma

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Kaiji Fan
  • Cathrin Ritter
  • Paul Nghiem
  • Astrid Blom
  • Monique E. Verhaegen
  • Andrzej Dlugosz
  • Ødum, Niels
  • Andersen, Anders Woetmann
  • Richard W. Tothill
  • Rodney J. Hicks
  • Michael Sand
  • David Schrama
  • Dirk Schadendorf
  • Selma Ugurel
  • Jurgen C. Becker

Purpose: Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is an aggressive skin cancer with neuroendocrine differentiation. There is an unmet need for MCC-specific blood-based surrogate biomarkers of tumor burden; circulating cell-free miRNA may serve this purpose. Experimental Design: Expression of miR-375 was quantified in 24 MCC and 23 non-MCC cell lines, 67 MCC and 58 non-MCC tumor tissues, sera of 2 preclinical MCC models, and sera of 109 patients with MCC and 30 healthy controls by nCounter human-v2-miRNA expression or miR-375–specific real-time PCR assays. The patients' sera consisted of two retrospective (discovery and training) and two prospective (validation) cohorts. Results: miR-375 expression was high in MCC cell lines and tissues compared with non-MCCs. It was readily detected in MCC-conditioned medium and sera of preclinical models bearing MCC xenografts. miR-375 levels were higher in sera from tumor-bearing patients with MCC than in tumor-free patients or healthy controls (P < 0.0005). Moreover, miR-375 serum levels correlated with tumor stage in tumor-bearing (P ¼ 0.037) but not in tumor-free (P ¼ 0.372) patients with MCC. miR-375 serum level showed high diagnostic accuracy to discriminate tumor-bearing and tumor-free patients with MCC as demonstrated by ROC curve analysis in the retrospective cohorts (AUC ¼ 0.954 and 0.800) as well as in the prospective cohorts (AUC ¼ 0.929 and 0.959). miR-375 serum level reflected dynamic changes in tumor burden of patients with MCC during therapeutic interventions. Conclusions: Circulating cell-free miR-375 proved as a surrogate marker for tumor burden in MCC without restriction to polyomavirus positivity; it thus appears to be useful for therapy monitoring and the follow-up of patients with MCC.

Original languageEnglish
JournalClinical Cancer Research
Volume24
Issue number23
Pages (from-to)5873-5882
Number of pages10
ISSN1078-0432
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

ID: 212854721