ACADEMIC TRAINEES ANNUAL EVENT 2011

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sdfgafgafga NEUTROPHIL GELATINASE- ASSOCIATED LIPOCALIN IS ELEVATED IN BILE FROM PATIENTS WITH MALIGNANT PANCREATOBILIARY DISEASE A. Zabron 1 , V. Horneffer-van der Sluis 2 , C. Wadsworth 1 , M. Gierula 2 , A. Thillainayagam 3 , P. Vlavianos 3 , D. Westaby 3 , S. Taylor-Robinson 1 , R. Edwards 2 , S. Khan 1 1 Hepatology and Gastroenterology Section, Division of Diabetes Endocrinology and Metabolism, Department of Medicine, 2 Centre of Pharmacology and Therapeutics , Imperial College London, 3 Gastroenterology Unit , Hammersmith Hospital, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom Previously presented at UEGW and BSG. Accepted for publication in the American Journal of Gastroenterology ACADEMIC TRAINEES ANNUAL EVENT 2011

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NEUTROPHIL GELATINASE-ASSOCIATED LIPOCALIN IS ELEVATED IN BILE FROM PATIENTS WITH MALIGNANT PANCREATOBILIARY DISEASE. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of ACADEMIC TRAINEES ANNUAL EVENT 2011

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NEUTROPHIL GELATINASE-ASSOCIATED LIPOCALIN IS ELEVATED IN BILE FROM

PATIENTS WITH MALIGNANT PANCREATOBILIARY DISEASE A. Zabron1, V. Horneffer-van der Sluis 2, C. Wadsworth 1, M. Gierula 2, A.

Thillainayagam 3, P. Vlavianos3, D. Westaby 3, S. Taylor-Robinson 1, R. Edwards 2, S. Khan 1

1Hepatology and Gastroenterology Section, Division of Diabetes Endocrinology and Metabolism, Department of Medicine, 2Centre of Pharmacology and Therapeutics , Imperial College London,3Gastroenterology Unit , Hammersmith Hospital, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom

Previously presented at UEGW and BSG. Accepted for publication in the American Journal of Gastroenterology

ACADEMIC TRAINEES ANNUAL EVENT 2011

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Content

• Focus on pancreatic adenocarcinoma

• Significance and current diagnostic difficulties

• Proteomic technique

• Results

• Possible clinical use and further work

• Summary

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Pancreatic adenocarcinoma

• Imperial AHSC HPB tertiary referral centre

• 10th commonest cancer in the UK

• Mortality similar to incidence

• Diagnosis by cross-sectional imaging, histology / cytology and serum biomarkers imperfect

• Frequently present with biliary obstruction

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Anatomy of biliary system

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Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography : ERCP

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Stenting across obstruction via ERCP

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Bile as a diagnostic sample in malignant pancreatobiliary disease

• Current cytological analysis of brushings – low sensitivity

• Spy-glass

• Metabonomic interest

• Recent proteomic interest IGF1 and pancreatic elastase-3B higher in CC bile (Alvaro D. et al.,

2009)CEACAM-6 and MUC1(CA 19-9) higher in PA bile (Farina et al., 2009)

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Current Study

Aims:To investigate the potential of bile as a source of novel biomarkers in pancreatic adenocarcinoma

Design:Cohort study

Discovery phase - label-free proteomics to unfractionated sample, antibody-based techniques

Validation cohort

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Sample collection and preparation

• Bile aspirated at ERCP in patients with benign or malignant disease prior to introduction of contrast

• Routine blood results/ serum markers, demographics etc recorded

• Blood and urine collected at same event

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Label-free proteomics: tryptic peptide production

No cancerPancreatic

cancer

In-gel protease digestion

Crude centrifuged sample:

water/ lipids/ bile acids and pigments/

proteins

SDS-PAGE

Slice gel into equal fragments containing denatured proteins in size ranges

Extract from gel slice

Tryptic peptides

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Label-free proteomics: LC-MS/MS

Retention time (min)

Inte

nsi

ty o

f d

etec

tio

n

Peptide fragments

Retention time (min)

Retention time (min)M

ass/

carg

e ra

tio

n (

m/z

)

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Normalised abundance profileof single peptide spot

Retention time (min)

Mas

s/ch

arg

e ra

tio

n (

m/z

)

Retention time (min)

Mas

s/ch

arg

e ra

tio

n (

m/z

)

Retention time (min)

Mas

s/ch

arg

e ra

tio

n (

m/z

)

Normalised abundance volume ofall peptide spots of an identified

protein

CCBenign PaCa1 1

118

Label-free proteomics: Normalisation and Quantification

VPLQQNFQDNQFQGK

“196,454.71”

Normalised abundance

of aspecific protein

in gel piece

Progenesis, nonlinear dynamics

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Data analysis

• SEQUEST» human RefSeq protein sequence database (NCBI)

• Progenesis» Quantification by non-linear dynamics

• Statistical analysis

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Results of label-free proteomics

•Bile analysed from patients with pancreatic adenocarcinoma (n=4) and benign biliary disease (n=4)

•Over 200 different proteins identified including S100A6, LCN2, CEACAM6, REG1α, PRDX6

•10 proteins varied significantly in abundance between benign and malignant groups

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Volcano plot of identified proteins

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Volcano plot of identified proteins

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NGAL_HUMAN: Lipocalin 2 or Neutrophil gelatinase-associated

lipocalinNormalised abundance volume of

all peptide spots of lipocalin 2

•P = 0.029, protein fold change 13.9

•10 unique tryptic peptides

•52% protein sequence coverage

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NGAL as a novel biomarker: Biological plausibility

• “stress protein”

• Novel urinary biomarker in for acute kidney injury

• Overexpression in malignancy e.g. breast, ovarian, colon and pancreatic tissue

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Immunoblotting : Clinical characteristics

Benign Malignant p-value

Number 22 16

Age [year] 59.83 ± 20.84 71.08 ± 11.62 0.043

Albumin [g/l] 33.84 ± 7.59 27.25 ± 7.7 0.013

Bilirubin [mmol/l] 35.33 ± 96.23 210.08 ± 155.3 <0.001

ALT [IU/l] 83.7 ± 101.8 298.17 ± 248.7 <0.001

ALP [IU/l] 346.8 ± 494.2 768.00 ± 602.9 0.006

CRP 15.14 ± 20.23 96.83 ± 100.0 0.008

urea 6.305 ± 4.116 5.59 ± 2.3 NS

creatinine 97.40 ± 45.17 86.86 ± 33.4 NS

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Western blot of NGAL in bile

P<0.0001

Gel 1

Gel 2

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p=0.007 NS NSa) b) c)

Bile Serum Urine

Benign Malignant0

100

200

300

400

500

600

1800

NG

AL

[n

g/m

l]

Benign Malignant

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

NG

AL

[n

g/m

l]

ELISA of NGAL in different body fluids

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NGAL in bile as a diagnostic marker

Receiver Operator Characteristics

Area Under the Curve: 0.80

Cut-off level [ng/ml] Specificity% Sensitivity %

< 569.5 54.29 100.0

< 661.0 54.29 92.31

< 803.8 54.29 84.62

< 952.5 57.14 84.62

< 1015 60.00 84.62

< 1080 62.86 84.62

< 1142 62.86 76.92

< 1230 65.71 76.92

< 1319 68.57 76.92

< 1419 68.57 69.23

< 1549 71.43 69.23

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Combination of NGAL in bile and serum CA19-9

Below cut-off Above cut-off

Benign 13 3

Malignant 2 11

Sensitivity: 85%Specificity: 82%PPV: 79%NPV: 87%

Cut-off NGAL in bile: 3000 ng/mlCut-off serum CA19-9: 110 U/ml

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Validation cohort

Benign (n=14) Malignant (n=7) p-value

Diagnoses (n) Stone (6), Chronic Pancreatitis (3), PSC (3), Leak (2)

Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma (5), Gallbladder Cancer (1), HCC (1)

Female:male 5:9 4:3

Age [year] 61 (36-79) 75 (64-78) NS

Albumin [g/l] 35.5 (27.5-42.0) 31 (26-36) NS

Bilirubin [mmol/l] 15.0 (6.5-26.0) 121 (14-421) 0.004

ALT [IU/l] 60.0 (28.0-156.5) 168 (126-357) NS

ALP [IU/l] 181 (122-1176) 620 (350-917) NS

Cut-off >570ng/ml gives sensitivity 100%, specificity 55%

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Biological functions of NGAL in malignancy

Principal cellular mechanisms attributed to NGALin determining its pro- and anti-tumoral effects.

[Bolignano D, et al. Cancer Lett. (2010) Vol. 288(1): pp 10-6.]

Schematic model of NGAL-mediated iron traffic.

[Kai M. Schmidt-Ott et al. J Am Soc Nephrol 18: 407–413, 2007]

General structure of A) the ferrichromes, prototypical hydroxamate type siderophores, and B) ferric

enterobactin, a prototypical catechol-type siderophore.

[Neilands J B, et al. J. Biol. Chem. 1995;270:26723-26726]

A) B)

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Summary

• Valuable HPB patient cohort and scientific facilities available at Imperial AHSC

• This study identified over 200 proteins in bile

• Confirmed that proteomic analysis of body fluids allows identification of potential biomarkers in pancreatobiliary malignancy

• There are significant differences in the proteome of bile in malignant and benign pancreatic disease

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Summary 2

• This study highlights the increased abundance of bile LCN2/ NGAL in pancreatic adenocarcinoma.

• Further work is required to elucidate the possible use of biliary LCN2/NGAL as a clinical marker of disease.

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Future work

• Increasing collaborations with Imperial HPB teams to expand recruitment

• Validation of biliary NGAL as a diagnostic and/ or prognostic marker in pancreatic cancer

• Exploration of its biological mechanism e.g. role stabilising MMP-9

• Extension of this approach to other biliary tract disease

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Acknowledgements

British Liver Trust

Alan Morement Memorial Fund

Patients!

HPB and Endoscopy teams at Imperial AHSC

Proteomics team at Imperial College

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Thank you

Any questions?