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Dive into the research topics where Kanthida Kusonmano is active.

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Featured researches published by Kanthida Kusonmano.


Nature Genetics | 2016

The genomic landscape and evolution of endometrial carcinoma progression and abdominopelvic metastasis

William J. Gibson; Erling A. Hoivik; Mari K. Halle; Amaro Taylor-Weiner; Andrew D. Cherniack; Anna Berg; Frederik Holst; Travis I. Zack; Henrica Maria Johanna Werner; Kjersti Mangseth Staby; Mara Rosenberg; Ingunn Stefansson; Kanthida Kusonmano; Aaron Chevalier; Karen Klepsland Mauland; Jone Trovik; Camilla Krakstad; Marios Giannakis; Eran Hodis; Kathrine Woie; Line Bjørge; Olav Karsten Vintermyr; Jeremiah Wala; Michael S. Lawrence; Gad Getz; Scott L. Carter; Rameen Beroukhim; Helga B. Salvesen

Recent studies have detailed the genomic landscape of primary endometrial cancers, but the evolution of these cancers into metastases has not been characterized. We performed whole-exome sequencing of 98 tumor biopsies including complex atypical hyperplasias, primary tumors and paired abdominopelvic metastases to survey the evolutionary landscape of endometrial cancer. We expanded and reanalyzed The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) data, identifying new recurrent alterations in primary tumors, including mutations in the estrogen receptor cofactor gene NRIP1 in 12% of patients. We found that likely driver events were present in both primary and metastatic tissue samples, with notable exceptions such as ARID1A mutations. Phylogenetic analyses indicated that the sampled metastases typically arose from a common ancestral subclone that was not detected in the primary tumor biopsy. These data demonstrate extensive genetic heterogeneity in endometrial cancers and relative homogeneity across metastatic sites.


British Journal of Cancer | 2012

KRAS gene amplification and overexpression but not mutation associates with aggressive and metastatic endometrial cancer

Even Birkeland; Elisabeth Wik; Siv Mjøs; Erling A. Hoivik; Jone Trovik; Henrica Maria Johanna Werner; Kanthida Kusonmano; Kjell Petersen; Maria B. Ræder; Frederik Holst; Anne Margrete Øyan; Karl-Henning Kalland; Lars A. Akslen; Ronald Simon; Camilla Krakstad; Helga B. Salvesen

Background:Three quarter of endometrial carcinomas are treated at early stage. Still, 15 to 20% of these patients experience recurrence, with little effect from systemic therapies. Homo sapiens v-Ki-ras2 Kirsten rat sarcoma viral oncogenes homologue (KRAS) mutations have been reported to have an important role in tumorigenesis for human cancers, but there is limited knowledge regarding clinical relevance of KRAS status in endometrial carcinomas.Methods:We have performed a comprehensive and integrated characterisation of genome-wide expression related to KRAS mutations and copy-number alterations in primary- and metastatic endometrial carcinoma lesions in relation to clinical and histopathological data. A primary investigation set and clinical validation set was applied, consisting of 414 primary tumours and 61 metastatic lesions totally.Results:Amplification and gain of KRAS present in 3% of the primary lesions and 18% of metastatic lesions correlated significantly with poor outcome, high International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics stage, non-endometrioid subtype, high grade, aneuploidy, receptor loss and high KRAS mRNA levels, also found to be associated with aggressive phenotype. In contrast, KRAS mutations were present in 14.7% of primary lesions with no increase in metastatic lesions, and did not influence outcome, but was significantly associated with endometrioid subtype, low grade and obesity.Conclusion:These results support that KRAS amplification and KRAS mRNA expression, both increasing from primary to metastatic lesions, are relevant for endometrial carcinoma disease progression.


Modern Pathology | 2013

ARID1A loss is prevalent in endometrial hyperplasia with atypia and low-grade endometrioid carcinomas

Henrica Maria Johanna Werner; Anna Berg; Elisabeth Wik; Even Birkeland; Camilla Krakstad; Kanthida Kusonmano; Kjell Petersen; Karl H. Kalland; Anne Margrete Øyan; Lars A. Akslen; Jone Trovik; Helga B. Salvesen

ARID1A (AT-rich interactive domain 1A) has recently been identified as a tumor suppressor gene in various, predominantly gynecological cancers. We wanted to investigate the distribution of ARID1A in endometrial hyperplasia, carcinomas and metastatic lesions to elucidate the timing of expression loss of its protein ARID1A in the course of endometrial cancer carcinogenesis. In addition, we wanted to assess the relationship between the loss of ARID1A and clinicopathological variables in endometrial cancer in general and the endometrioid subtype in particular. We analyzed a prospectively collected series of 535 primary endometrial cancers, 77 metastatic lesions, as well as 38 retrospectively collected endometrial hyperplasias with evaluable immunohistochemical staining for ARID1A. Fresh frozen tissue was available for mRNA microarray analysis in 122 primary tumors in parallel. Loss of ARID1A protein expression was noted in none of the hyperplasias without atypia, 16% of hyperplasias with atypia, 19% of primary endometrioid tumors and 28% of metastatic lesions. Loss of ARID1A in primary tumor was significantly associated with endometrioid grade 1 or 2 and clear-cell histology, diploid tumor cells, younger patient age and deeper myometrial infiltration, but not survival. ARID1A RNA expression was significantly correlated with ARID1A protein loss. Thus, loss of ARID1A appears to be an early event in the carcinogenesis of endometrioid uterine carcinomas and the association with deep myometrial infiltration may suggest an importance for invasiveness.


BMC Cancer | 2012

Lipocalin 2 expression is associated with aggressive features of endometrial cancer

Monica Mannelqvist; Ingunn Stefansson; Elisabeth Wik; Kanthida Kusonmano; Maria B. Ræder; Anne Margrete Øyan; Karl-Henning Kalland; Marsha A. Moses; Helga B. Salvesen; Lars A. Akslen

BackgroundIncreased expression of lipocalin 2 (LCN2) has been observed in several cancers. The aim of the present study was to investigate LCN2 in endometrial cancer in relation to clinico-pathologic phenotype, angiogenesis, markers of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), and patient survival.MethodsImmunohistochemical staining was performed using a human LCN2 antibody on a population-based series of endometrial cancer patients collected in Hordaland County (Norway) during 1981-1990 (n = 256). Patients were followed from the time of primary surgery until death or last follow-up in 2007. The median follow-up time for survivors was 17 years. Gene expression data from a prospectively collected endometrial cancer series (n = 76) and a publicly available endometrial cancer series (n = 111) was used for gene correlation studies.ResultsExpression of LCN2 protein, found in 49% of the cases, was associated with non-endometrioid histologic type (p = 0.001), nuclear grade 3 (p = 0.001), >50% solid tumor growth (p = 0.001), ER and PR negativity (p = 0.028 and 0.006), and positive EZH2 expression (p < 0.001). LCN2 expression was significantly associated with expression of VEGF-A (p = 0.021), although not with other angiogenesis markers examined (vascular proliferation index, glomeruloid microvascular proliferation, VEGF-C, VEGF-D or bFGF2 expression). Further, LCN2 was not associated with several EMT-related markers (E-cadherin, N-cadherin, P-cadherin, β-catenin), nor with vascular invasion (tumor cells invading lymphatic or blood vessels). Notably, LCN2 was significantly associated with distant tumor recurrences, as well as with the S100A family of metastasis related genes. Patients with tumors showing no LCN2 expression had the best outcome with 81% 5-year survival, compared to 73% for intermediate and 38% for the small subgroup with strong LCN2 staining (p = 0.007). In multivariate analysis, LCN2 expression was an independent prognostic factor in addition to histologic grade and FIGO stage.ConclusionIncreased LCN2 expression is associated with aggressive features and poor prognosis in endometrial cancer.


European Journal of Cancer | 2014

Loss of progesterone receptor links to high proliferation and increases from primary to metastatic endometrial cancer lesions

Ingvild L. Tangen; Henrica Maria Johanna Werner; Anna Berg; Mari K. Halle; Kanthida Kusonmano; Jone Trovik; Erling A. Hoivik; Gordon B. Mills; Camilla Krakstad; Helga B. Salvesen

OBJECTIVE In endometrial cancer loss of progesterone receptor (PR, gene name PGR) is associated with aggressive disease and altered response to hormonal treatment. The aim of this study was to investigate changes in PR expression level with disease progression, and explore whether differences in gene expression according to PR status can be linked to processes involved in cancer development elucidating new therapeutic opportunities. METHODS 686 primary endometrial cancers and 171 metastatic lesions were investigated for PR expression in relation to clinical and histopathological data. Protein levels were investigated by immunohistochemistry and reverse phase protein array, and mRNA levels by DNA oligonucleotide microarray. RESULTS PR protein level was significantly associated with PGR mRNA expression (P<0.001) and patient survival (P<0.001). Loss of PR increased with disease progression, with 23% of the primary tumours and 76% of metastases demonstrating PR loss. Using a cell cycle progression signature score, PR loss was associated with increased proliferation for both oestrogen receptor (ER) positive and negative tumours. Through a Connectivity Map search, CDK inhibitors and other drugs with anti-proliferative effects were suggested in particular for treatment of patients with loss of PR. CONCLUSION Loss of PR in endometrial cancer is associated with increased proliferation, poor survival, and increases from primary to metastatic lesions. Based on expression profiles, CDK inhibitors may have activity in PR negative tumours, supporting further testing in clinical trials for patients with systemic endometrial cancer dependent on PR status.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2013

High Phospho-Stathmin(Serine38) Expression Identifies Aggressive Endometrial Cancer and Suggests an Association with PI3K Inhibition

Elisabeth Wik; Even Birkeland; Jone Trovik; Henrica Maria Johanna Werner; Erling A. Hoivik; Siv Mjøs; Camilla Krakstad; Kanthida Kusonmano; Karen Klepsland Mauland; Ingunn Stefansson; Frederik Holst; Kjell Petersen; Anne Margrete Øyan; Ronald Simon; Karl-Henning Kalland; William Ricketts; Lars A. Akslen; Helga B. Salvesen

Purpose: High Stathmin expression has recently been associated with clinical progress in endometrial cancers. Stathmin protein activity is modulated by phosphorylation, and the Serine38 site is one of four Stathmin phospho-sites. The presence and significance of pStathmin(S38) is largely unknown in human cancers, and we here examined the associations between this marker and tumor cell proliferation, clinicopathologic phenotype, and survival impact in endometrial cancer. A relationship with possible treatment targets was explored by integrated analysis of transcriptional alterations. Experimental Design: Primary endometrial cancers from two independent patient series (n = 518/n = 286) were analyzed. Biomarkers were assessed by immunohistochemistry, FISH, flow cytometry, DNA oligonucleotide microarray, single-nucleotide polymorphism array, and Sanger sequencing, and related to clinicopathologic annotations and follow-up information. Results: High pStathmin(S38) level was associated with poor prognosis, independent of other features, and correlated to increased tumor cell proliferation as well as high Stathmin levels. On the basis of transcriptional differences between high/low pStathmin(S38) tumors, phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)/mTOR/HSP90 were suggested as possible targets in pStathmin(S38)-high cases. High pStathmin(S38) was associated with several PI3K pathway alterations: amplification of the 3q26 region, increased PIK3CA copy number (FISH) and a PI3K activation score (all P < 0.05). Conclusions: High pStathmin(S38) is a novel biomarker of increased tumor cell proliferation and impaired prognosis as reported here for independent cohorts of endometrial cancer and not previously shown in human cancer. Our data support a rationale for further studies exploring effects of drugs inhibiting the PI3K signaling pathway in pStathmin(S38)-high endometrial cancer, including a potential value of pStathmin(S38) in predicting response to PI3K/mTOR/HSP90 inhibitors. Clin Cancer Res; 19(9); 2331–41. ©2013 AACR.


PLOS ONE | 2012

High-Throughput Mutation Profiling of Primary and Metastatic Endometrial Cancers Identifies KRAS, FGFR2 and PIK3CA to Be Frequently Mutated

Camilla Krakstad; Even Birkeland; Danila Seidel; Kanthida Kusonmano; Kjell Petersen; Siv Mjøs; Erling A. Hoivik; Elisabeth Wik; Mari K. Halle; Anne Margrete Øyan; Karl-Henning Kalland; Henrica Maria Johanna Werner; Jone Trovik; Helga B. Salvesen

Background Despite being the most common pelvic gynecologic malignancy in industrialized countries, no targeted therapies are available for patients with metastatic endometrial carcinoma. In order to improve treatment, underlying molecular characteristics of primary and metastatic disease must be explored. Methodology/Principal Findings We utilized the mass spectrometric-based mutation detection technology OncoMap to define the types and frequency of point somatic mutations in endometrial cancer. 67 primary tumors, 15 metastases corresponding to 7 of the included primary tumors and 11 endometrial cancer cell lines were screened for point mutations in 28 known oncogenes. We found that 27 (40.3%) of 67 primary tumors harbored one or more mutations with no increase in metastatic lesions. FGFR2, KRAS and PIK3CA were consistently the most frequently mutated genes in primary tumors, metastatic lesions and cell lines. Conclusions/Significance Our results emphasize the potential for targeting FGFR2, KRAS and PIK3CA mutations in endometrial cancer for development of novel therapeutic strategies.


British Journal of Cancer | 2014

High level of HSF1 associates with aggressive endometrial carcinoma and suggests potential for HSP90 inhibitors

Hilde Engerud; Ingvild L. Tangen; Ansgar Berg; Kanthida Kusonmano; Mari K. Halle; Anne Margrete Øyan; Karl-Henning Kalland; Ingunn Stefansson; Jone Trovik; Helga B. Salvesen; Camilla Krakstad

Background:Recent identification of a specific role of HSF1 in cancer progression has led to new relevance of HSF1 as both a prognostic and a predictive marker. The role of HSF1 in endometrial cancer has so far been unexplored.Methods:A total of 823 lesions from endometrial carcinoma precursors, primary tumours and metastases were prospectively collected and explored for HSF1 protein expression in relation to established markers for aggressive disease and survival. Transcriptional alterations related to HSF1 protein level were investigated by microarray analysis for 224 freshly frozen samples in parallel.Results:High expression of HSF1 protein in endometrial carcinoma is significantly associated with aggressive disease and poor survival (all P-values ⩽0.02), also among ERα-positive patients presumed to have good prognosis. The HSF1-related gene signatures increase during disease progression and were also found to have prognostic value. Gene expression analyses identified HSP90 inhibition as a potential novel therapeutic approach for cases with high protein expression of HSF1.Conclusions:We demonstrate for the first time in endometrial cancer that high expression of HSF1 and measures for transcriptional activation of HSF1 associate with poor outcome and disease progression. The HSP90 inhibitors are suggested as new targeted therapeutics for patients with high HSF1 levels in tumour in particular.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Switch in FOXA1 status associates with endometrial cancer progression

Ingvild L. Tangen; Camilla Krakstad; Mari K. Halle; Henrica Maria Johanna Werner; Anne Margrete Øyan; Kanthida Kusonmano; Kjell Petersen; Karl-Henning Kalland; Lars A. Akslen; Jone Trovik; Antoni Hurtado; Helga B. Salvesen

Background The transcription factor Forkhead box A1 (FOXA1) is suggested to be important in hormone dependent cancers, although with little data for endometrial cancer. We investigated expression levels of FOXA1 in primary and metastatic endometrial cancer in relation to clinical phenotype, and transcriptional alterations related to FOXA1 status. Methods Protein expression of FOXA1 was explored by immunohistochemistry in 529 primary and 199 metastatic endometrial carcinoma lesions. mRNA levels from corresponding 158 fresh frozen primary and 42 metastatic lesions were analyzed using Agilent Microarrays (44k) in parallel. Results Low FOXA1 protein expression in primary tumors significantly correlated with low FOXA1 mRNA, high age, non-endometrioid histology, high grade, loss of ERα and PR and poor survival (all p-values <0.05). Through a Connectivity Map search, HDAC inhibitors were suggested as potential treatment for patients with low FOXA1 expression. An increase in FOXA1 expression was observed from primary to metastatic lesions and it correlated with CDKN2A expression in metastases. Conclusion Low FOXA1 is associated with poor survival and suggests a potential for HDAC inhibitors in endometrial carcinoma. A switch in FOXA1 expression from primary to metastatic lesions is observed and gene expression indicates a link between FOXA1 and CDKN2A in metastatic lesions.


Oncotarget | 2015

ATAD2 overexpression links to enrichment of B-MYB-translational signatures and development of aggressive endometrial carcinoma

Camilla Krakstad; Ingvild L. Tangen; Erling A. Hoivik; Mari K. Halle; Anna Berg; Henrica Maria Johanna Werner; Maria B. Ræder; Kanthida Kusonmano; June Zou; Anne Margrete Øyan; Ingunn Stefansson; Jone Trovik; Karl-Henning Kalland; Hong Wu Chen; Helga B. Salvesen

We have explored the potential for clinical implementation of ATAD2 as a biomarker for aggressive endometrial cancer by investigating to what extent immunohistochemical (IHC) staining for ATAD2 is feasible, reflects clinical phenotype and molecular subgroups of endometrial carcinomas. Increased expression of the ATAD2 gene has been implicated in cancer development and progression in a number of tissues, but few studies have investigated ATAD2 expression using IHC. Here we show that high ATAD2 protein expression is significantly associated with established clinical-pathological variables for aggressive endometrial cancer, also in the subset of estrogen receptor α (ERα) positive tumors. Protein and mRNA expression of ATAD2 were highly correlated (P < 0.001), suggesting that IHC staining may represent a more clinically applicable measure of ATAD2 level in routinely collected formalin fixed paraffin embedded specimens. Gene expression alterations in samples with high ATAD2 expression revealed upregulation of several cancer-related genes (B-MYB, CDCs, E2Fs) and gene sets that previously have been linked to aggressive disease and potential for new targeting therapies. Our results support that IHC staining for ATAD2 may be a clinically applicable biomarker reflecting clinical phenotype and targetable alterations in endometrial carcinomas to be further explored in controlled clinical trials.

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Helga B. Salvesen

Haukeland University Hospital

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Jone Trovik

Haukeland University Hospital

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