The progress in this area was marked with sequencing of the human genome in 2001 which allowed us to interrogate the entire human genome for genetic associations, both within genes and between genes. As a follow-up to that, we were able to identify, because of the known biology of other genetic changes that respond to targeted approaches, that a targeted approach would be appropriate rather than asking what genetic changes occur in the genome associated with hepatocellular carcinoma. We askedwhether the genetic changes associated with fundamental mechanisms such as HBV-induced fibrosis, vesicle trafficking and cytokine signaling are associated with HBV-related HCC? These results clearly indicate that some of those processes and some of those genetic changes are involved.
SNP技术在肝癌研究中的作用
Sninsky教授:通过对HCC患者进行SNP检测,我们可以从三个方面来提升疾病的诊疗质量。首先,可以更好地了解HBV在HCC中的发病机制。其次,通过对潜在机制的了解,我们可以开发包括生物制剂或小分子制剂用于HCC的治疗及早期干预。最后,可以开发HCC诊断或预后的分子标志物的检测,以及用于药物疗效的预测。
One is to better understand the pathogenesis of disease of the involvement of HBV in hepatocellular carcinoma. Secondly, through the knowledge of the underlying mechanisms, to be able to develop therapeutic strategies, either biologicals or small molecules, to intervene in disease. And thirdly, to develop diagnostic tests that either provide diagnostic or prognostic information, or in the case of companion diagnostics, predictive information in terms of which patients will respond to which therapies and when.
I think what Dr Sninsky suggested is very important, to use the information that comes from unbiased analyses of genomic risks to uncover new mechanisms of disease and new screening strategies as well as the potential for chemo-preventive strategies. If patients have a particular genetic risk for cancer related to a specific mechanism perhaps we can attenuate that mechanism protectively via a chemoprevention method so patients have a reduced risk for cancer. We also think that antifibrotic therapies in general should ultimately reduce the risk for cancer because they decrease the progression to cirrhosis.
We are still most concerned about hepatitis B and C, but the unknown population is fatty liver disease where we think there will be a rising incidence of cancer in patients who are obese and have non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. So currently, we still worry most about viral hepatitis patients but this extends to patients with other diseases including fatty liver as a consequence of NASH but also alcohol.
We know that fibrosis predisposes to liver cancer and we are only beginning to understand the mechanisms linking fibrosis mechanistically, but there are many potential associations which include the stromal microenvironment, the immune environment, the mechanical features of the tissue and particularly tissue stiffness, as well as changes in hepatic stellate cell gene expression that foster a microenvironment that is permissive for cancer. As you know from your own work, that can include innate immune signaling as well as genes that have not previously been linked to fibrosis pathogenesis.