International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2024)

Identification of a Panel of miRNAs Associated with Resistance to Palbociclib and Endocrine Therapy

  • Rosalba Torrisi,
  • Valentina Vaira,
  • Laura Giordano,
  • Bethania Fernandes,
  • Giuseppe Saltalamacchia,
  • Raffaella Palumbo,
  • Carlo Carnaghi,
  • Vera Basilico,
  • Francesco Gentile,
  • Giovanna Masci,
  • Rita De Sanctis,
  • Armando Santoro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25031498
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 3
p. 1498

Abstract

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We investigated whether we could identify a panel of miRNAs associated with response to treatment in tumor tissues of patients with Hormone Receptor-positive/HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer treated with endocrine therapy (ET) and the CDK4/6 inhibitor (CDK4/6i)i palbociclib. In total, 52 patients were evaluated, with 41 receiving treatment as the first line. The overall median PFS was 20.8 months (range 2.5–66.6). In total, 23% of patients experienced early progression (miR-378e, miR-1233, miR-99b-5p, miR-1260b, miR-448, -miR-1252-5p, miR-324-3p, miR-1233-3p) showed a statistically significant negative association with PFS. When we considered PFS miR-378e, miR-99b-5p, miR-877-5p, miR-1297, miR-455-5p, and miR-4536-5p were statistically associated with a poor outcome. In the multivariate analysis, the first three miRNAs confirmed a significant and independent impact on PFS. The literature data and bioinformatic tools provide an underlying molecular rationale for most of these miRNAs, mainly involving the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway and cell-cycle machinery as cyclin D1, CDKN1B, and protein p27Kip1 and autophagy. Our findings propose a novel panel of miRNAs associated with a higher likelihood of early progression in patients treated with ET and Palbociclib and may contribute to shed some light on the mechanisms of de novo resistance to CDK4/6i, but this should be considered exploratory and evaluated in larger cohorts.

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