| Literature DB >> 15266314 |
G H Williams1, R Swinn, A T Prevost, P De Clive-Lowe, I Halsall, J J Going, C N Hales, K Stoeber, S J Middleton.
Abstract
Symptomatic oesophageal cancer is usually advanced and the prognosis poor. Lethality of symptomatic oesophageal cancer has motivated screening for these diseases earlier in their evolution, but reliable methods for early diagnosis remain elusive. We have demonstrated that dysregulated expression of minichromosome maintenance (MCM) proteins 2-7 is characteristic of early epithelial carcinogenesis, and that these key DNA replication initiation factors can be used as diagnostic markers for cervical and genito-urinary tract cancer. In this study, we investigated whether minichromosome maintenance protein 5 (Mcm5) can be used to detect oesophageal cancer cells in gastric aspirates. Two monoclonal antibodies raised against His-tagged human Mcm5 were used in a time-resolved immunofluorometric assay to measure Mcm5 levels in cells isolated from gastric aspirates of 40 patients undergoing gastroscopy for suspected or known oesophageal carcinoma or symptoms of dyspepsia. The test discriminated with high specificity and sensitivity between patients with and without oesophageal cancer (85% sensitivity (95% confidence interval (CI)=62-97%), 85% specificity (CI=66-96%)), as demonstrated by the large area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (0.93 (95% CI=0.85-0.99)). Elevated levels of Mcm5 in gastric aspirates are highly predictive of oesophageal cancer. This simple test for oesophageal cancer is readily automated with potential applications in primary diagnosis, surveillance and screening.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15266314 PMCID: PMC2364793 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6602028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Patient demographics and sample characteristics at endoscopy and biopsy
| Male | 24 (60%) |
| Female | 16 (40%) |
| Age (years) | 74 (58–82) |
| Gastric aspirate volume (ml) | 4 (4–4.5) |
| Tumour absent | 27 (57%) |
| Normal oesophagus | 2 |
| Diverticulum | 1 |
| Shatski ring | 1 |
| Chemical gastropathy | 1 |
| Oesophagitis | 9 |
| Barrett's oesophagus without dysplasia | 13 |
| | 20 (43%) |
| AdCa | 10 |
| SCC | 10 |
| | |
| T2N0M0 | 1 |
| T3N0M0 | 9 |
| T3N0M1 | 1 |
| T3N1M0 | 1 |
| T3N1M1 | 1 |
| T4N1M0 | 1 |
AdCa=adenocarcinoma; SCC=squamous cell carcinoma.
Two samples from one patient with AdCa, four samples from one patient and two samples from two patients with SCC, and two samples from one patient with Barrett's oesophagus with associated inflammation and ulceration were included in the analysis.
Seven patients with oesophagitis had ulceration.
Three AdCa's had associated severely atypical Barrett's oesophagitis.
Figure 1ROC curve of immunofluorometric Mcm5 test. The jagged curve (solid line) is the nonparametric ROC curve. The diagonal line is a reference line. Area under curve=0.93 (95% CI=0.85–0.99). ROC curves for detection of bladder cancer (jagged dotted line) and prostate cancer (jagged dashed line) are shown for comparison.
Sensitivity, specificity and predictive values of the Mcm5 test for oesophageal cancer
| Mcm5 test ⩾1500 cut point | 95 (75–99) | 48 (29–68) | 58 (39–75) | 93 (66–99) |
| Mcm5 test ⩾5000 cut point | 85 (62–97) | 85 (66–96) | 81 (58–95) | 88 (70–98) |
| Mcm5 test ⩾7500 cut point | 75 (51–91) | 96 (81–99) | 94 (70–99) | 84 (66–95) |
Mcm5=minichromosome maintenance protein 5; CI=confidence interval; PPV=positive predictive value; NPV=negative predictive value.
Three cut-off points were used to demonstrate test performance under different circumstances as follows: at the lower detection limit of the assay (fluorescence signal generated from 1500 proliferating HeLa S3 cells well−1), where sensitivity of the test was maximal; at the point where the false-positive and false-negative rates of the test were equal (5000 cells well−1); and where specificity exceeded 95% (7500 cells well−1).
Immunofluorometric Mcm5 test performance in patient groups
| Negative for cancer | 27 | 1718 | <1500–2897 | 15 (4–34) |
| No ulceration | 20 | <1500 | <1500–<2115 | 5 (1–25) |
| Ulceration | 7 | 4871 | 2897–6732 | 43 (10–82) |
| Oesophageal cancer | 20 | 16 401 | 7263–29 822 | 85 (62–97) |
| AdCa | 10 | 11 210 | 5023–23 692 | 80 (44–97) |
| SCC | 10 | 25 036 | 9752–34 221 | 90 (56–99) |
Mcm5=minichromosome maintenance protein 5; CI=confidence interval; AdCa=adenocarcinoma; SCC=squamous cell carcinoma.
Figure 2Mcm5 signal by sample group. Each box represents the interquartile range of the Mcm5 signal data for the corresponding sample group. The horizontal line inside the box represents the median signal. Any signal further than 1.5 times the interquartile range is considered as an outlying signal value and plotted separately. The dotted lines extend 1.5 times the interquartile range from the limits of the box.
Figure 3Mcm2 protein expression in normal and neoplastic oesophagus. (A) Normal squamous epithelium showing Mcm2 expression restricted to the basal proliferative compartment. Onset of the differentiation programme is associated with downregulation of the MCM replication licensing factors. Mcm2 expression is undetectable in surface terminally differentiated cells. (B) Nondysplastic testinal-type ‘specialised’ Barrett's mucosa showing Mcm2 expression in cells in the proliferative zone beneath the mucosal surface. Mcm2 expression is markedly downregulated as cells execute their differentiation programme and migrate onto the mucosal surface. (C) Low- to high-grade squamous dysplasia showing high levels of Mcm2 expression. The arrest in differentiation is associated with persistant Mcm2 expression in surface layers. (D) Low-grade Barrett's dysplasia showing high levels of Mcm2 expression in upper crypts and surface layers. The failure of dysplastic cells to execute their differentiation programme (maturation arrest) is associated with persistent expression of the MCM replication licensing factors in upper crypt and surface epithelium. (E) Moderately to poorly differentiated SCC showing high levels of Mcm2 expression. Occasional viable Mcm2 negative cells are present showing morphological features of differentiation (keratinisation). (F) Poorly differentiated AdCa showing high levels of Mcm2 expression. Occasional viable Mcm2-negative cells are also present showing some features of glandular differentiation (mucin production).