ILAT: Patients with non-small cell lung cancer lacking MSH2 DNA repair protein fare better with chemotherapy
An analysis from the International Adjuvant Lung Trial
(IALT) reports that tumor levels of the MSH2 protein predict long-term response
to cisplatin-based chemotherapy among patients with surgically removed non-small
cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
MSH2 is a protein that cancer cells use to repair DNA
damaged by cisplatin. Researchers found that patients with no or low levels of
the MSH2 protein respond better to treatment than patients with high levels.
A secondary finding of this study was that the predictive
value of MSH2 was equal to that of a second, previously identified protein associated
with DNA repair, called ERCC1. And when tumor levels of both ERCC1 and MSH2 are
taken into account, researchers report they can further identify patients most
likely to benefit from cisplatin-based chemotherapy.
"We have identified new and easily performed assays that
can be used to predict response to chemotherapy in patients with non-small cell
lung cancer by measuring tumor levels of two key proteins - ERCC1 and MSH2," said
Pierre Fouret, M.D., Ph.D., professor at Institut Gustave Roussy (Villejuif, France)
and Universite Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris, France) and the study's lead author.
"This development is a step toward more personalized treatment for patients whose
lung cancers have been surgically removed."
Cisplatin is commonly used as a postoperative treatment
for NSCLC, but not all patients benefit. In this study, overall survival was compared
between 257 patients with NSCLC whose tumors contained MSH2 ("MSH2-positive")
and 416 whose tumors contained no MSH2 or low levels of this protein ("MSH2- negative").
Patients were then grouped by whether or not they underwent cisplatin-based adjuvant
chemotherapy.
Adjuvant cisplatin-based chemotherapy increased overall
survival among MSH2-negative patients, but did not benefit MSH2-positive patients.
For MSH2-negative patients, median overall survival was 58 months for those who
received cisplatin versus 42 months for those who did not receive chemotherapy.
Among MSH2-positive patients, median overall survival was 49 months for those
who received chemotherapy versus 58 months among those who did not.
Investigators also found that the predictive value of
MSH2 and ERCC1 together was greater than either one alone. Patients with low tumor
levels of both proteins who were treated with cisplatin-based chemotherapy lived
21 months longer than those who did not receive chemotherapy (55 months versus
34 months). The investigators concluded that MSH2 status may be combined with
ERCC1 to predict long-term benefit from cisplatin-based chemotherapy.
|