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Metastatic Breast Cancer: Seed or Soil

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Title: Metastatic Breast Cancer: Seed or Soil


1
Metastatic Breast Cancer Seed or Soil?
  • Katherine Weilbaecher, M.D.
  • Assistant Professor in Medicine and Cell Biology
    and Physiology
  • Division of Oncology

2
Metastasis
  • Dissemination of cancer away from the primary
    site and formation of new tumors
  • As opposed to local invasion
  • Lymph Node- via lymphatics
  • Visceral-the most deadly (liver,lung,adrenal)
  • Bone/bone marrow- specialized
  • Brain- issues of blood/brain barrier
  • Median survival time for patients with metastatic
    breast cancer is 2-4 years (long term survival is
    possible).

3
Metastasis
  • The cause of death in 90 of cancer patients
  • The cause of significant pain and suffering
  • Signifies that a cancer is usually incurable
  • Need for effective systemic therapy- local
    therapies usually not effective
  • Least well understood of all stages of
    carcinogenesis

4
At Presentation
18
39
26
4
3
Only 50-70 of patients with breast cancer will
be cured
5
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6
Bone and Liver Metastases
7
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8
Occult Tumor Cells in Bone Marrow Correlate with
Poor Prognostic Factors
Overall Survival
Gerber et al, JCO 19(4)960-971, 2001
9
Treatment of Breast Cancer- Main Goal is to
Prevent Metastasis
  • Local therapies Surgery and Radiation
  • Systemic Therapy Adjuvant chemotherapy and/or
    hormone therapy increases cure rate by 2-10 (but
    everyone gets treated)
  • Other therapies Bisphosphonates, angiogenesis
    inhibitors, Cox-2 inhibitors, Her-2/EGFR1
    inhibitors, immune stimulators, Diet-low fat,
    high fiber, red wine, vitamins, laughter therapy

10
Stages of Tumor Metastasis
Mundy. Nat. Rev. Cancer. 20022584-593.
11
Genes Involved in Metastasis
  • Integrins- receptors involved in cell-
    extracellular matrix (ECM) interactions
  • Matrix Metalloproteases (MMP) - involved in ECM/
    adhesion molecule degradation
  • Cadherins- receptors involved in cell-cell
    interactions
  • Growth factors/receptors

12
Metastasis Formation is Highly Inefficient
  • 0.01 of highly metastatic cells form tumor foci
    after intravenous injection.
  • 1cm3 size tumor has 109 cells. 106 cells will be
    shed into the circulation each day.
  • 95 of all breast cancer patients have
    detectable circulating tumor cells.
  • Metastases from renal cell carcinoma, melanoma,
    colon cancer and breast cancer can lie dormant
    for 15-20 years
  • Angiogenesis inhibition, immune status, hormonal
    changes, new mutations.

13
Seed and Soil Hypothesis
  • In cancer of the breast, the bones suffer in a
    special way, which cannot be explained by any
    theory of embolism alone.
  • when a plant goes to seed, its seeds are carried
    in all directions, but they can only grow if they
    fall on congenial soil.
  • Stephen Paget

Paget. Lancet. 1889 1571-2.
14
Incidence of Metastases to Bone
Bone Lesions ()
  • Myeloma 95-100
  • Breast 65-75
  • Prostate 65-90
  • Thyroid 60
  • Bladder 40
  • Lung 30-40
  • Renal 20-25
  • Melanoma 14-45

350,000 patients in US die with bone metastases
each year
Mundy. Nat. Rev. Cancer. 20022584-593.
15
Complications of Skeletal Metastases
  • Pain
  • Analgesics, constipation, confusion, radiation
  • Pathologic bone fracture
  • Pain, immobility, surgery, radiation
  • Spinal cord compression
  • Hypercalcemia
  • Anorexia, confusion, constipation

16
Skeletal Metastases
  • Cancer cells require normal host cells to
    metastasize to bone
  • Osteoclast activation is central bone metastases
  • Therapies targeted to block osteoclast
    development and function can block bone metastases

17
Osteo Lytic
Osteo Blastic
Mundy. Nat. Rev. Cancer. 20022584-593.
18
Bone Formation
Estrogen
Osteoblast
T
Glucocorticoids
M-CSF RANKL
T
Estrogen
Glucocorticoids
Osteoclast
T
Bisphosphonates
Bone Resorption
19
Tumor Mediated Bone Invasion
TGFb, IGFs,BMPs FGFs, PDGF
PDGF VEGF FGFs IGFs TGFb
RANKL IL-6 BMPs SDF-1 MCP-1 MIP-1a
Endothelin 1
20
Osteoclast Inhibitor-OPG Prevents Tumor
Associated Bone Destruction
Honore et al. Nat Medicine 2000, 6521-528.
21
OPG does not not effect tumor growth in bone
Honore et al. Nat Medicine 2000, 6521-528.
22
OPG decreases Astrocyte Hypertrophy in spinal
cord
Honore et al. Nat Medicine 2000, 6521-528.
23
OPGL/RANKL and Tumor Mediated Osteolysis and Pain
HOW?
Thompson and Tonge, Nature Medicine.
20006504-506.
24
Bisphosphonates- Inhibitors of
Osteoclastogenesis and Function
  • Etidronate 1.0
  • Clodronate 10
  • Pamidronate 100
  • Alendronate 1000
  • Ibandronate 10,000
  • Zoledronic acid 100,000

25
Pharmacokinetics of Bisphosphonates
  • Rapid absorption to bone
  • 60 of the dose retained in the skeleton
  • 50 of the dose still in the skeleton after 6
    months
  • Gastrointestinal absorption is poor
  • did not exceed 5 of the dose
  • amount available to bone was 0.1-0.2 after an
    oral dose
  • Renal excretion (unmetabolized)
  • what is not bound to bone is excreted within
    approximately 24 hours

26
Pamidronate Decreases Skeletal Complications and
Pain in Women with Breast Cancer Osteolytic
Metastases
Skeletal Complications
Pain
N185 Pamidronate N195 Placebo
Hortobagyi et al. NEJM. 19963351785-1792.
27
Tumor Mediated Bone Invasion
TGFb, IGFs,BMPs FGFs, PDGF
PDGF VEGF FGFs IGFs TGFb
RANKL IL-6 BMPs SDF-1 MCP-1 MIP-1a
Endothelin 1
28
Left Cardiac Ventricular (LV) injection of Tumor
Cells
  • Current models of bone metastases involve
    intracardiac (arterial) injection of tumor cell
    lines.

29
Chambers et al. Nat Rev Cancer, 2002 2563.
30
Dominant Negative TGFbRII Expression in
MDA-MB-231 Breast Cancer Cells Impairs Tumor
Induced Osteolysis
PTHrp
Yin et al. JCI, 103197-206 (1999)
31
PTHrp Overexpression Restores Tumor Osteolysis in
DN-TGFbRII MDA-231 Mutants
Yin et al. JCI, 103197-206 (1999)
32
Tumor Production of PTHrp Induces Osteolytic
Destruction
Breast Cancer Cell
Käkönen and Mundy Cancer.2003 97,S3834-839.
33
Human ER- breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231
develops higher metastatic capacity after in
vivo passaging
Kang et al. Cancer Cell. 2003 3 537-549.
34
Fidler. Nature New Biol, 1973242148-149.
35
Parental MDA cells already Express Poor-prognosis
gene set
Parental MDA and Strong Metastasis clones have
different Gene expression patterns
Kang et al. Cancer Cell. 2003 3 537-549.
36
Human Breast Cancer Cell Line MDA-MB-231
Transfected with Metastasis Genes Increase
Bone Tropism
Kang et al. Cancer Cell. 2003 3 537-549.
37
Individual MDA cells from parental line have
highly metastatic Phenotype and genotype
Kang et al. Cancer Cell. 2003 3 537-549.
38
Dynamic heterogeneity
Equilibrium between Highly metastatic
(varient) And non-metastatic (majority)
5x105
1x107
Hill et al. Science. 1984 224998-1001.
39
Bone Tropism Mediated by Metastasis Genes
Kang et al. Cancer Cell. 2003 3 537-549.
40
Gene expression profile nearly identical between
primary cancer and lymph node metastasis
  • mRNA from human breast tumors from primary tumor
    and lymph node metastasis in same patients were
    collected
  • Gene expression profiles were almost identical
    suggesting that the molecular program of a
    primary tumor is generally retained in its
    metastases.

Perou et al. Nature. 2000, 406747-752.
41
Bone Marrow Micrometastasis have fewer
chromosomal abnormalities than primary tumor by
CGH analysis
Schmidt-Kittler et al. PNAS. 2003100(13)7737-42
.
42
Bone Marrow Micrometastasis from M0 have fewer
Chromosomal abnormalities than M1 patients by
CGH analysis
M0-black M1-white
Schmidt-Kittler et al. PNAS. 2003100(13)7737-42
.
43
Animal Models of Metastasis- Call for Research!
  • Few spontaneous models of metastases- her2-
    neu,TRAMP, RipTag2
  • Tumor cell line injection models- IV, LV
  • Orthotopic transplantation of tumors
  • Problems of species barrier and immunocompetance

44
Proposed Role of Host Cell b3 Integrin Expression
in Metastasis
Endothelium
Platelet
b 3
b 3
b 3
b 3
Osteoclast
45
Genes Critical to Osteoclast Development
46
Hypothesis
  • Beta 3 integrin expression on host cells is
    critical to tumor bone invasion.
  • Tumor bone invasion will be impaired in the b3-/-
    mouse.

47
INTEGRIN FAMILY
R. Hynes Cell .2002110 673-687.
48
Matrix binding promotes integrin clustering and
association with the cytoskeleton
Motility Survival Proliferation Shape change
Hood and Cheresh, Nature Reviews Cancer.2002
291-100.
49
src
avb3 Integrin
50
b3 Integrin-/- have Dysfunctional Osteoclasts
and Platelets
  • b3-/- develop Osteosclerosis with age
  • b3-/- OCs have defective actin rings, defective
    ruffled border and defective bone resorption
  • b3-/- have defective Platelet Aggregation
  • increased bleeding time, cutaneous and
    gastrointestinal bleeding

Hodivala-Dilke et al. JCI, 1999,
103229-238. McHugh et al. JCI, 2000,
105443-440.
51
Left Cardiac Ventricular (LV) injection of Tumor
Cells- Bone Invasion assay
  • Current models of bone metastases involve
    intracardiac injection of tumor cell lines.
  • In this study- we used the B16-F10 murine
    melanoma cell line

Yoneda et al. Cancer 2000, 882979-88. Arguello
et al. Cancer Res. 1988,486876-6881.
52
b3-/- Mice Are Protected from Bone Invasion
b3/
b3-/-
a
b
c
Bakewell et al. PNAS. 2003 10014199-204.
53
Did the Tumor cells get to the bone marrow?
Experimental Approach Directly inoculate B16
tumor cells into the bone marrow cavity.
Intra-tibial Injection
54
Decreased Bone Loss in b3-/- Mice After B16 IT
Injection
b3-/-
b3/
a
b
P
TTumor SSaline
T
S
S
T
b3/
b3-/-
Bakewell et al. PNAS. 2003 10014199-204.
55
Intra tibial- conclusions
  • b3-/- bone environment can support growth of B16
    cells
  • B16 does not induce trabecular bone destruction
  • B16 cells do not directly resorb bone

56
Are there anatomic/microenvironment defect(s) in
b3-/- mice that impair tumor entry into bone?
  • Experimental Approach
  • Bone Marrow Transplantation to restore
    hematopoeitic cell function (osteoclast/platelets)
  • Possible rescue of endothelial cell function

57
Bone Marrow Transplantation Assay
  • Mice are lethally irradiated with 950 rads
  • 5 x 106 bone marrow injected by tail vein
  • 2-3 weeks post-BMT mice are injected via
    left-ventricle with 105 B16 cells
  • 14 days post-LV. injection mice are sacrificed
    and metastases examined

WTWT
FWT
WTKO
Bakewell et al. PNAS. 2003 10014199-204.
58
Bone Marrow Transplantation Normalizes b3-/-
Bleeding Time and b3-/- Osteoclast Spreading
3 weeks after Transplant
b3-/-
WT
WT b3-/-
BMMs cultured for 6 days with GST-RANKL and
mM-CSF
5 mice/group
Bakewell et al. PNAS, 2003, 10014199-204.
59
Bone Marrow Transplantation Restores Bone
Metastases in b3-/-
Percent Metastases after Bone Marrow Transplant
n 10
n 13
n 7
60
Do the hematopoetic lineage osteoclasts play a
critical role in faciliting B16 entry and growth
into bone?
  • Experimental Approach
  • Perform bone metastasis assay in an osteoclast
    defective src-/- mouse with normal platelet
    function
  • Src-/- osteoclasts are TRAP multinucleated but
    do not form a ruffled border, have abnormal
    motility and resorption

Soriano et al. Cell. 1991 64693-702
61
Src-/- have Dysfunctional Osteoclasts and
Grossly Normal Platelet Function
Bakewell et al. PNAS. 2003 10014199-204.
62
Src-/- Mice are Not Protected from Metastases
src/
src-/-
n8
n6
n8
n6
Bone
Visceral
63
Src-/- mice are protected from tumor associated
bone loss
Bakewell et al. PNAS, 2003, 10014199-204.
64
Src-/- conclusions
  • B16 do not directly destroy trabecular bone
  • Src expression in osteoclasts facilitates tumor
    associated bone destruction
  • Osteopetrosis and defective osteoclast function
    do not prevent tumor entry into bone marrow and
    did not impair tumor growth in bone marrow

65
Proposed Role of Host Cell b3 Integrin Expression
in Metastasis
b 3
b 3
b 3
b 3
Mundy. Nat. Rev. Cancer, 2002, 2584-593.
66
Will inhibition of platelet beta 3 integrin
function prevent tumor entry into bone?
  • Experimental Approach
  • Inhibitor of murine platelet GP2b3a (aIIbb3)
  • Half life is 3 hours- but platelet aggregation
    abnormal for at least 8 hours
  • requires oral gavage
  • 100mg/kg induces complete blockade of platelet
    aggregation at 30 minutes

67
Thrombosis and Cancer
  • Association noted for 140 years (Trousseau)
  • Incidence of clinically important thrombosis is
    5-60 for solid tumor malignancies
  • Twice as likely to have post-surgical DVT
  • Hematologic malignancies have significantly lower
    risk of thrombosis
  • Occult cancer found in 6-16 of patients with DVT
  • Improved survival in cancer patients treated with
    Heparin in small randomized trials
  • Tumors express
  • Tissue factor like activity and thrombin

68
GPIIb-IIIa (aIIbb3) mediates platelet aggregation
ADP
Fibrinogen, vWf
Thrombin
GP IIb-IIIa
GP Ib-V-IX
Fibrinogen
vWf
GPIIb-IIIa antagonist
69
2.5 days of aIIbb3 Inhibitor Therapy Decreases
Bone and Visceral Metastases
p0.0013 p0.0125
-5 doses Inhibitor q12hr starting 30 min prior to
B16 LV Injection -14 day analysis of Metastasis
(3 separate experiments)
Bakewell et al. PNAS, 2003, 10014199-204.
70
b3-/- Platelets Do Not Form Large Tumor/Platelet
Clumps
WtINH (single cell enlarged image)
WT Platelets B16
b3-/- Platelets B16
WT PLTINH B16
71
Conclusions
  • Host cell beta 3 integrin expression facilitates
    metastases in this animal model
  • B16 Tumor induced bone destruction requires
    functional osteoclasts.
  • Src and beta 3 mediated Osteoclast resorption
    required and possible drug targets
  • B16 tumor growth in bone marrow does not require
    functioning host src or beta 3 expression
  • Why are metastases to bone in bisphosphonate
    treated animal decreased? (non-OC effect)
  • Platelet beta 3 integrin expression facilitates
    B16 tumor metastasis to bone (and viscera?)
  • How do platelets interact with metastatic tumor
    cells or end organ sites?

72
Conclusions
  • Metastasis requires dissemination and growth in
    new environment
  • Theories of Metastasis still in debate
  • Orderly progression of accumulated genetic
    mutations (Vogelstein model)
  • Dissemination and then new acquisition of
    mutations
  • Cancer stem cells?
  • Tumor-Host cell interactions are critical

73
Future Directions in Metastasis Research
  • Study both Seed and Soil
  • Need better models
  • Need to understand specific pathways
  • Targeted therapies- specific to site of
    metastasis and stage of metastases (micro versus
    macro)
  • Role of Host tissues platelets, immune system,
    nutrition
  • Clinical trials in high risk patients
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