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Basic and Translational Investigations |
University Hospital Bonn, Department of Neurology, Bonn, Germany (M.L., A.S., S.M.); VU University Hospital Amsterdam, Department of Internal Medicine and Metabolic Unit, Amsterdam, The Netherlands (Y.S., H.B.); University Hospital Bonn, Department of Neurosurgery, Bonn, Germany (M.S.)
Address correspondence to Michael Linnebank, University Hospital Zurich, Department of Neurology, Frauenklinikstrasse 26, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland (michael.linnebank{at}usz.ch).
| Abstract |
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Key Words: glioblastoma glioma homocysteine MTHFR survival
| Introduction |
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Instability of genomic DNA and impaired DNA methylation are important for the development and progression of many tumors.2 Therefore, functional genetic variants of methionine metabolism are attractive candidate factors influencing the development and clinical course of human cancers. Indeed, the MTHFR missense variant c.677C>T (A222V) and the MTR missense variant c.2756A>G (D919G) have been correlated with the incidence of various malignancies.3 Furthermore, functional synergisms have been suggested for the variants MTR c.2756A>G and Tc2 c.776C>G (P259R).4 However, only a few studies have investigated the role of the genetic variants of methionine metabolism as a prognostic factor in patients with cancer. In the present study, we analyzed the effects of four functional polymorphisms of methionine metabolism on the clinical course of 214 patients with glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). Although our previous results did not identify the MTHFR c.677C>T variant as a risk factor for the incidence of GBM,3 the present study suggests an influence of MTHFR c.677C>T on survival.
| Materials and Methods |
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We analyzed 214 GBM patients (41% female; median age at diagnosis, 62 years; range, 23-80 years; age at diagnosis, 58 ± 12 years, mean ± SD) who underwent surgery in the Department of Neurosurgery of the University Hospital Bonn (Bonn, Germany) between 1994 and 2003. All histopathological diagnoses were made at the Department of Neuropathology/German Brain Tumor Reference Center at the University of Bonn using the WHO criteria.5 A gliosarcoma was diagnosed in 6% of the patients and a giant cell GBM in 3%. Surgical treatment consisted of total resection in 52% of the patients, subtotal/partial resection in 43%, and biopsy in 5%. Eighty-two percent of patients underwent standard fractionated postoperative radiotherapy, and 11% underwent additional adjuvant chemotherapy. Thus, adjuvant therapy after surgery was categorized as none (surgery only), radiotherapy, and radiation and chemotherapy. For 107 patients, treatment at tumor relapse could not be ascertained. Hence, therapy for recurrent tumors was not included in the statistical analysis. Median overall survival of all patients (± SD) was 10 ± 1 months (95% confidence interval, 9-11 months), with 7% censored.
Genotyping
The genotypes of four missense variants involved in methionine metabolism, MTHFR c.677C>T, MTHFR c.1298A>C, MTR c.2756A>G, and Tc2 c.776C>G, were determined by PCR amplification of genomic DNA prepared from peripheral leukocytes with subsequent restriction analysis as published previously.4
Statistical Analysis
The log rank test and Kaplan-Meier curves were used to analyze the effect of the four variants on overall survival. Owing to multiple testing,
was set to 0.0125. The effect of the MTHFR variant c.677C>T on overall survival was further investigated by Cox regression, with simultaneous analysis of MTHFR genotype, age, sex, postoperative Karnofsky score, extent of resection, and adjuvant therapy as covariables. In additional explorative analyses (univariate log rank tests and multivariate Cox regression analysis with the covariables listed above), the effect of the MTHFR c.677C>T variant was analyzed in subgroups of patients defined by adjuvant therapy, age (<60 years vs. >60 years, the mean and median age at diagnosis in our population and prior studies6), and postoperative Karnofsky score (<70 vs.
70). Data are reported as median ± SE.
| Results |
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Multivariate Cox regression including the MTHFR c.677C>T genotype and the clinical data indicated that important prognostic factors were younger age (linear variable; Wald = 7.10, p = 0.008), higher Karnofsky score after surgery (linear variable; Wald = 21.2, p < 0.001), and adjuvant therapy (none, 2 ± 0.35 months; radiotherapy, 10 ± 0.36 months; radiation and chemotherapy, 11 ± 0.82 months; Wald = 7.81, p = 0.005). The extent of resection had a statistically significant influence on survival in the univariate log rank test (total resection, 10 ± 0.69 months; subtotal/partial resection, 8 ± 0.85 months; biopsy, 2 ± 1.58 months; log rank = 10.3, p = 0.006) but not in the multivariate Cox regression analysis (Wald = 0.68, p = 0.447). In the multivariate analysis, the effect of the MTHFR c.677C>T genotype on survival was not statistically significant (Wald = 1.01, p = 0.316).
Univariate log rank subgroup analysis revealed a highly significant association of the MTHFR c.677C>T polymorphism with survival for patients younger than 60 years at diagnosis (37% of our study sample): CC, 13 ± 1 months; CT, 11 ± 2 months; TT, 7 ± 3 months (log rank = 9.94, p = 0.007; Table 2). Multivariate Cox regression analysis showed that these data were robust; that is, the effect of the MTHFR c.677C>T variant on survival in this patient subset was as strong as the effects of some of the clinical covariables investigated simultaneously: MTHFR c.677C>T (Wald = 8.58, p = 0.003), extent of resection (Wald = 2.10, p = 0.148), Karnofsky score after surgery (Wald = 12.3, p < 0.001), and adjuvant therapy (Wald = 3.32, p = 0.086). No significant effect was seen for the MTHFR c.677C>T polymorphism for patients >60 years of age (Wald = 0.27, p = 0.601).
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Additionally, the MTHFR c.677C>T variant was found to significantly correlate with survival in the multivariate analysis among patients with a postoperative Karnofsky score >70 regardless of age (CC, 12 ± 2 months; CT, 11 ± 1 months; TT, 10 ± 4 months; Wald = 5.89, p = 0.015). No such effect was seen for patients with a postoperative Karnofsky score <70 (CC, 5 ± 1 months; CT, 4 ± 2 months; TT, 5 ± 3 months; Wald = 0.01, p = 0.951). The MTHFR c.677C>T polymorphism showed no significant correlation with survival in any of the subgroups defined by adjuvant therapy.
| Discussion |
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Several tumor mutations have been correlated with the clinical course of GBM patients.8 In addition, a few studies have indicated that germline genetic variants may have prognostic relevance, as well, for example, the ERCC1 c.8092C>A polymorphism, the deletion of glutathione S-transferase T1 (GSTT1),9 and a polymorphism in the 5'-untranslated region of the epidermal growth factor gene (g.61G>A).10
The major finding of the present study is an association of the c.677TT genotype of the germline variant MTHFR c.677C>T (A222V) with an adverse prognosis for GBM patients. Significant effects of the MTHFR c.677C>T polymorphism were in particular seen in patient subgroups with a comparatively good prognosis. In the subgroup of patients younger than 60 years, the 6-month difference in median survival for patients homozygous for the MTHFR c.677CC genotype versus patients with the c.677TT genotype suggests that the effect size contributed by the c.677C>T genotype is clinically relevant. Accordingly, the MTHFR c.677TT genotype was also associated with a poorer prognosis within the patient subgroup with a postoperative Karnofsky score
70 but not among patients with a worse performance status. The association of MTHFR c.677C>T with overall survival did not show any therapy-specific effect. Given the limitations of any association study, our findings have to be reproduced in an independent dataset.
The T-allele of MTHFR c.677C>T, in particular when in the homozygous state, leads to clearly reduced enzyme activity.11 Our findings may be explained by an effect on nucleic acid synthesis and thus on chromosomal stability.1 In addition, a lack of MTHFR activity can reduce the available SAM in several organs, including the CNS, and SAM is the key methyl group donor for DNA methylation (Fig. 1).12 The T-allele of MTHFR c.677C>T has already been reported to be associated with global hypomethylation of genomic DNA.13 Hypomethylation of the O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) promoter in GBM tumor cells has been associated with shorter survival in GBM patients receiving radiotherapy and treated with temozolomide,14 and a correlation between the T-allele of the MTHFR c.677C>T variant and a decreased MGMT promoter hypermethylation has already been observed in a series of uterine cervical cancers.15 Thus, it is tempting to speculate that differential (tumor) DNA methylation due to MTHFR c.677C>T might constitute the molecular basis of the association between the MTHFR c.677C>T polymorphism and survival of GBM patients. Accordingly, Cadieux et al.16 recently demonstrated that the MTHFR c.677C>T variant or a deletion encompassing the MTHFR gene locus on chromosome 1p36.3 was associated with global DNA hypomethylation in GBM tissue. Tumors with DNA hypomethylation or a MTHFR gene deletion exhibited an increased proliferation rate.16 Our study provides the clinical data predicted by these observations: reduced MTHFR activity due to the presence of the T-allele of the c.677C>T variant is associated with shorter overall survival. One limitation of our study was that we did not know the folate intake or plasma folate levels of the GBM patients, which might have modified the effect of the MTHFR genotype on overall survival, as the effect of the c.677C>T variant on MTHFR activity is modified by the availability of folate.11,17
Our findings may have some therapeutic implications. Because the adverse biological effects of the T-allele of the MTHFR c.677C>T variant, for example, on DNA methylation, may well become apparent only in the context of a low folate status,17 folate supplementation or dietary strategies influencing methionine and further metabolites of methionine metabolism might be interesting candidate supportive therapies for GBM patients.
Received for publication July 12, 2007. Accepted for publication October 24, 2007.
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