Radiation Oncology (Jul 2023)

Circulating miR-21 as a prognostic biomarker in HCC treated by CT-guided high-dose rate brachytherapy

  • Matthias Stechele,
  • Henrike Link,
  • Heidrun Hirner-Eppeneder,
  • Marianna Alunni-Fabbroni,
  • Moritz Wildgruber,
  • Lukas Salvermoser,
  • Stefanie Corradini,
  • Regina Schinner,
  • Najib Ben Khaled,
  • Daniel Rössler,
  • Eithan Galun,
  • Shraga Nahum Goldberg,
  • Jens Ricke,
  • Philipp Maximilian Kazmierczak

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13014-023-02316-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background and aims Prognostic biomarkers identifying patients with early tumor progression after local ablative therapy remain an unmet clinical need. The aim of this study was to investigate circulating miR-21 and miR-210 levels as prognostic biomarkers of HCC treated by CT-guided high-dose rate brachytherapy (HDR-BT). Materials and Methods 24 consecutive HCC patients (BCLC A and B) treated with CT-guided HDR-BT (1 × 15 Gy) were included in this prospective IRB-approved study. RT-PCR was performed to quantify miR-21 and miR-210 levels in blood samples acquired prior to and 2 d after HDR-BT. Follow-up imaging (contrast-enhanced liver MRI and whole-body CT) was performed in 3 months follow-up intervals. Therapy response was assessed with patients classified as either responders or non-responders (12 each). Responders were defined as having no local or diffuse systemic progression within 6 months and no diffuse systemic progression exceeding 3 nodules/nodule diameter > 3 cm from 6 months to 2 years. Non-responders had recurrence within 6 months and/or tumor progression with > 3 nodules or individual lesion diameter > 3 cm or extrahepatic disease within two years, respectively. Biostatistics included parametric and non-parametric testing (Mann–Whitney-U-test), as well as Kaplan–Meier curve construction. Results The responder group demonstrated significantly decreasing miR-21 values 2 d post therapy compared to non-responders (median miR-21 2−ΔΔCт: responders 0.73 [IQR 0.34], non-responders 1.53 [IQR 1.48]; p = 0.0102). miR-210 did not show any significant difference between responders and non-responders (median miR-210 2−ΔΔCт: responders 0.74 [IQR 0.45], non-responders 0.99 [IQR 1.13]; p = 0.8399). Kaplan–Meier curves demonstrated significantly shorter time to systemic progression for increased miR-21 (p = 0.0095) but not miR-210 (p = 0.7412), with events accumulating > 1 year post therapy in non-responders (median time to systemic progression 397 days). Conclusion Increasing circulating miR-21 levels are associated with poor response and shorter time to systemic progression in HDR-BT-treated HCC. This proof-of-concept study provides a basis for further investigation of miR-21 as a prognostic biomarker and potential stratifier in future clinical trials of interventional oncology therapies. Trial registration: In this monocentric clinical study, we analyzed prospectively acquired data of 24 patients from the “ESTIMATE” patient cohort (Studiennummer: DRKS00010587, Deutsches Register Klinischer Studien). Ethical approval was provided by the ethics committee “Ethikkommission bei der LMU München” (reference number “17-346”) on June 20, 2017 and August 26, 2020.

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