Somatic PTEN and ARID1A loss and endometriosis disease burden: a longitudinal study

IF 6 1区 医学 Q1 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Dwayne R Tucker, Anna F Lee, Natasha L Orr, Fahad T Alotaibi, Heather L Noga, Christina Williams, Catherine Allaire, Mohamed A Bedaiwy, David G Huntsman, Martin Köbel, Michael S Anglesio, Paul J Yong
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STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION This prospective longitudinal study involved endometriosis tissue and clinical data from 126 participants who underwent surgery at a tertiary center for endometriosis (2013–2017), with a follow-up period of 5–9 years. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS PTEN and ARID1A loss was assessed using established immunohistochemistry (IHC) methods as proxies for somatic loss by two independent raters. PTEN and ARID1A status for each participant was defined as loss (loss in at least one sample for a participant) or retained (no loss in all samples for a participant). Primary analyses examined associations between PTEN and ARID1A loss and disease burden based on anatomic subtype (superficial peritoneal endometriosis (SUP), deep endometriosis (DE), ovarian endometrioma (OMA)) and rASRM stage (I–IV). Secondary analyses explored associations of PTEN and ARID1A loss with demographics, surgical difficulty, and pain scores (baseline and follow-up). Additionally, using previously published data on KRAS codon 12 mutations for this cohort, we investigated associations between variables in the primary and secondary analyses and acquiring two or more somatic events (PTEN loss, ARID1A loss, or KRAS mutation) in this cohort. The risk of reoperation over the 5–9 years was also examined. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE PTEN loss (68.3%; 86 participants) exceeded ARID1A loss (24.6%; 31 participants). Inter-rater reliability was substantial for PTEN (k = 0.69; 95% CI: 0.62–0.77) and ARID1A (k = 0.64; 95% CI: 0.51–0.77). PTEN loss was significantly associated with more severe anatomic subtypes (P < 0.001; participants with SUP only = 46.4%; participants with DE only or OMA only = 72.7%; participants with mixed subtypes = 85.1%), and higher stages (P = 0.024; Stage I = 47.8%; Stage II = 73.7%; Stage III = 80.8%; Stage IV = 81.0%). Results were similar for ARID1A loss, albeit with smaller sample size limiting power. PTEN loss was further associated with non-White ethnicities (P = 0.017) and greater surgical difficulty (more frequent need for ureterolysis) (P = 0.02). There were no differences in pain scores (baseline or follow-up) based on PTEN or ARID1A status. Reoperation was uncommon (13.5% of the cohort), and patterns in reoperation rates based on the presence of somatic alterations did not reach statistical significance. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION Sequencing was not performed to determine the type of PTEN and ARID1A somatic mutations resulting in loss of expression. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS These results demonstrate a link between PTEN somatic loss and greater endometriosis disease burden. These findings underscore the potential relevance of PTEN loss and other somatic driver mutations in a future molecular classification of endometriosis. STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S) This study was funded by Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) project grant (MOP-142273 and PJT-156084). P.J.Y. was supported by a Health Professional Investigator award from Michael Smith Health Research BC, Canada, and a Canada Research Chair (Tier 2) in Endometriosis and Pelvic Pain. M.S.A. was supported by a Michael Smith Health Research BC Scholar award, and CIHR project grants (369990, 462997, and 456767). The sponsors did not play any role in the study design; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; in the writing of the report; and in the decision to submit the article for publication. C.A. declares receiving payment from Pfizer for a symposium; being on advisory boards for AbbVie and Pfizer; being President and past President of the Canadian Society for the Advancement of Gynecologic Excellence (CanSAGE), co-lead of EndoAct Canada, and a board member of IPPS. M.A.B. has received consulting fees from AbbVie and Pfizer and grants from Ferring outside the scope of this work. D.G.H. is the founder of Canxeia Health but has no current affiliation. M.K. has received consulting fees from Helix Biopharma outside the scope of this work. M.S.A. received reimbursement of travel and registration fees to attend and present at the 2023 and 2024 annual meetings for the Society for Reproductive Investigation (SRI). P.J.Y. declares receiving: payment for a lecture from the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health (ISSWSH); honoraria from the CIHR; support to attend meetings from CanSAGE, ISSWSH, the International Pelvic Pain Society, the World Endometriosis Society (WES), the Society for the Study of Reproduction, and the Vulvodynia Summit; and discounted devices from Ohnut Wearable for a clinical trial. P.J.Y. is a data safety monitoring board member of a clinical trial funded by CIHR; and a strategic advisory board member for the Women’s Health Research Institute. P.J.Y. served as a board of directors member for CanSAGE and ISSWSH; was a junior board of directors member for WES; is a current board of directors member for WES; and was a committee chair for the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada. A subset of these results was presented by the first author at the 71st Society for Reproductive Investigation Annual Scientific Meeting on 15 March 2024. Other authors have nothing to declare. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER N/A.","PeriodicalId":13003,"journal":{"name":"Human reproduction","volume":"13 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":6.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Human reproduction","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/deae269","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

STUDY QUESTION Is there an association between the somatic loss of PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homolog) and ARID1A (AT-rich interaction domain 1A) and endometriosis disease severity and worse clinical outcomes? SUMMARY ANSWER Somatic PTEN loss in endometriosis epithelium was associated with greater disease burden and subsequent surgical complexity. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY Somatic cancer-driver mutations including those involving the PTEN and ARID1A genes exist in endometriosis without cancer; however, their clinical impact remains unclear. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION This prospective longitudinal study involved endometriosis tissue and clinical data from 126 participants who underwent surgery at a tertiary center for endometriosis (2013–2017), with a follow-up period of 5–9 years. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS PTEN and ARID1A loss was assessed using established immunohistochemistry (IHC) methods as proxies for somatic loss by two independent raters. PTEN and ARID1A status for each participant was defined as loss (loss in at least one sample for a participant) or retained (no loss in all samples for a participant). Primary analyses examined associations between PTEN and ARID1A loss and disease burden based on anatomic subtype (superficial peritoneal endometriosis (SUP), deep endometriosis (DE), ovarian endometrioma (OMA)) and rASRM stage (I–IV). Secondary analyses explored associations of PTEN and ARID1A loss with demographics, surgical difficulty, and pain scores (baseline and follow-up). Additionally, using previously published data on KRAS codon 12 mutations for this cohort, we investigated associations between variables in the primary and secondary analyses and acquiring two or more somatic events (PTEN loss, ARID1A loss, or KRAS mutation) in this cohort. The risk of reoperation over the 5–9 years was also examined. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE PTEN loss (68.3%; 86 participants) exceeded ARID1A loss (24.6%; 31 participants). Inter-rater reliability was substantial for PTEN (k = 0.69; 95% CI: 0.62–0.77) and ARID1A (k = 0.64; 95% CI: 0.51–0.77). PTEN loss was significantly associated with more severe anatomic subtypes (P < 0.001; participants with SUP only = 46.4%; participants with DE only or OMA only = 72.7%; participants with mixed subtypes = 85.1%), and higher stages (P = 0.024; Stage I = 47.8%; Stage II = 73.7%; Stage III = 80.8%; Stage IV = 81.0%). Results were similar for ARID1A loss, albeit with smaller sample size limiting power. PTEN loss was further associated with non-White ethnicities (P = 0.017) and greater surgical difficulty (more frequent need for ureterolysis) (P = 0.02). There were no differences in pain scores (baseline or follow-up) based on PTEN or ARID1A status. Reoperation was uncommon (13.5% of the cohort), and patterns in reoperation rates based on the presence of somatic alterations did not reach statistical significance. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION Sequencing was not performed to determine the type of PTEN and ARID1A somatic mutations resulting in loss of expression. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS These results demonstrate a link between PTEN somatic loss and greater endometriosis disease burden. These findings underscore the potential relevance of PTEN loss and other somatic driver mutations in a future molecular classification of endometriosis. STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S) This study was funded by Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) project grant (MOP-142273 and PJT-156084). P.J.Y. was supported by a Health Professional Investigator award from Michael Smith Health Research BC, Canada, and a Canada Research Chair (Tier 2) in Endometriosis and Pelvic Pain. M.S.A. was supported by a Michael Smith Health Research BC Scholar award, and CIHR project grants (369990, 462997, and 456767). The sponsors did not play any role in the study design; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; in the writing of the report; and in the decision to submit the article for publication. C.A. declares receiving payment from Pfizer for a symposium; being on advisory boards for AbbVie and Pfizer; being President and past President of the Canadian Society for the Advancement of Gynecologic Excellence (CanSAGE), co-lead of EndoAct Canada, and a board member of IPPS. M.A.B. has received consulting fees from AbbVie and Pfizer and grants from Ferring outside the scope of this work. D.G.H. is the founder of Canxeia Health but has no current affiliation. M.K. has received consulting fees from Helix Biopharma outside the scope of this work. M.S.A. received reimbursement of travel and registration fees to attend and present at the 2023 and 2024 annual meetings for the Society for Reproductive Investigation (SRI). P.J.Y. declares receiving: payment for a lecture from the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health (ISSWSH); honoraria from the CIHR; support to attend meetings from CanSAGE, ISSWSH, the International Pelvic Pain Society, the World Endometriosis Society (WES), the Society for the Study of Reproduction, and the Vulvodynia Summit; and discounted devices from Ohnut Wearable for a clinical trial. P.J.Y. is a data safety monitoring board member of a clinical trial funded by CIHR; and a strategic advisory board member for the Women’s Health Research Institute. P.J.Y. served as a board of directors member for CanSAGE and ISSWSH; was a junior board of directors member for WES; is a current board of directors member for WES; and was a committee chair for the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada. A subset of these results was presented by the first author at the 71st Society for Reproductive Investigation Annual Scientific Meeting on 15 March 2024. Other authors have nothing to declare. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER N/A.
体细胞PTEN和ARID1A缺失与子宫内膜异位症疾病负担:一项纵向研究
研究问题:PTEN(磷酸酶和紧张素同源物)和ARID1A (AT-rich interaction domain 1A)的体细胞缺失与子宫内膜异位症的严重程度和较差的临床结果之间是否存在关联?子宫内膜异位症的体细胞PTEN缺失与更大的疾病负担和随后的手术复杂性相关。包括PTEN和ARID1A基因在内的体细胞癌症驱动突变存在于无癌子宫内膜异位症中;然而,它们的临床影响尚不清楚。这项前瞻性纵向研究涉及子宫内膜异位症组织和临床数据,来自126名在子宫内膜异位症三级中心接受手术的参与者(2013-2017),随访期为5-9年。参与者/材料、环境、方法由两个独立的评分者使用已建立的免疫组织化学(IHC)方法评估PTEN和ARID1A的损失,作为体细胞损失的替代指标。每个参与者的PTEN和ARID1A状态被定义为丢失(至少一个参与者的样本丢失)或保留(所有参与者的样本没有丢失)。初步分析基于解剖亚型(浅表性腹膜子宫内膜异位症(SUP)、深部子宫内膜异位症(DE)、卵巢子宫内膜异位症(OMA))和rASRM分期(I-IV)检查了PTEN和ARID1A缺失与疾病负担之间的关系。二次分析探讨了PTEN和ARID1A缺失与人口统计学、手术难度和疼痛评分(基线和随访)的关系。此外,利用先前发表的KRAS密码子12突变的数据,我们研究了该队列中主要和次要分析变量之间的关系,并在该队列中获得了两个或多个体细胞事件(PTEN丢失,ARID1A丢失或KRAS突变)。5-9年内再次手术的风险也被检查。主要结果及偶然性PTEN丢失的作用(68.3%;86名参与者)超过ARID1A缺失(24.6%;31岁的参与者)。PTEN的评估间信度很高(k = 0.69;95% CI: 0.62-0.77)和ARID1A (k = 0.64;95% ci: 0.51-0.77)。PTEN缺失与更严重的解剖亚型显著相关(P <0.001;只有SUP的参与者= 46.4%;仅DE或仅OMA = 72.7%;混合亚型患者= 85.1%)和更高阶段(P = 0.024;I期= 47.8%;II期= 73.7%;III期= 80.8%;IV期= 81.0%)。ARID1A丢失的结果类似,尽管样本量限制功率较小。PTEN丢失与非白种人(P = 0.017)和更大的手术难度(更频繁地需要输尿管溶解)进一步相关(P = 0.02)。基于PTEN或ARID1A状态的疼痛评分(基线或随访)无差异。再手术不常见(占队列的13.5%),基于存在体细胞改变的再手术率模式没有统计学意义。限制,谨慎的原因没有进行测序来确定导致表达缺失的PTEN和ARID1A体细胞突变的类型。这些结果表明PTEN体细胞缺失与子宫内膜异位症疾病负担之间存在联系。这些发现强调了PTEN缺失和其他体细胞驱动突变在未来子宫内膜异位症分子分类中的潜在相关性。研究经费/竞争利益(S)本研究由加拿大卫生研究院(CIHR)项目资助(MOP-142273和PJT-156084)资助。P.J.Y.获得了加拿大Michael Smith Health Research BC的健康专业研究者奖,以及加拿大子宫内膜异位症和盆腔疼痛研究主席(Tier 2)的支持。M.S.A.得到了Michael Smith健康研究BC学者奖和CIHR项目资助(369990,462997和456767)的支持。赞助方在研究设计中没有发挥任何作用;收集、分析和解释数据;在撰写报告时;并决定将文章提交发表。C.A.宣布收到辉瑞公司的研讨会费用;艾伯维(AbbVie)和辉瑞(Pfizer)的顾问委员会成员;现任加拿大妇科卓越发展协会(CanSAGE)主席和前任主席,加拿大EndoAct联合领导,IPPS董事会成员。M.A.B.已收到艾伯维和辉瑞公司的咨询费以及本工作范围之外的Ferring公司的资助。D.G.H.是Canxeia Health的创始人,但目前没有任何关联。M.K.已经从Helix Biopharma获得了本工作范围之外的咨询费。M.S.A.参加和出席生殖调查学会(SRI) 2023年和2024年年会的旅费和注册费得到报销。P.J.Y. 声明收到:国际妇女性健康研究学会(ISSWSH)的讲座费用;CIHR的酬金;支持参加来自CanSAGE, ISSWSH,国际盆腔疼痛学会,世界子宫内膜异位症学会(WES),生殖研究学会和外阴痛峰会的会议;以及onut Wearable公司为临床试验提供的打折设备。P.J.Y.是CIHR资助的临床试验的数据安全监测委员会成员;也是妇女健康研究所战略顾问委员会成员。P.J.Y.曾担任CanSAGE和ISSWSH的董事会成员;是WES的初级董事会成员;现任WES董事会成员;她是加拿大妇产科医师协会的委员会主席。这些结果的一部分由第一作者在2024年3月15日的第71届生殖调查学会年度科学会议上发表。其他作者没有什么要申报的。试验注册号n / a。
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来源期刊
Human reproduction
Human reproduction 医学-妇产科学
CiteScore
10.90
自引率
6.60%
发文量
1369
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Human Reproduction features full-length, peer-reviewed papers reporting original research, concise clinical case reports, as well as opinions and debates on topical issues. Papers published cover the clinical science and medical aspects of reproductive physiology, pathology and endocrinology; including andrology, gonad function, gametogenesis, fertilization, embryo development, implantation, early pregnancy, genetics, genetic diagnosis, oncology, infectious disease, surgery, contraception, infertility treatment, psychology, ethics and social issues.
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