Literature DB >> 15371654

DNA-ploidy in advanced gastric carcinoma is less heterogeneous than in early gastric cancer.

Maria-Chiara Osterheld1, Liette Caron, Mireille Demierre, Ricardo Laurini, F T Bosman.   

Abstract

This analysis of DNA-ploidy heterogeneity in advanced gastric carcinomas is consistent with the hypothesis of the emergence of a single aneuploid cell clone as a crucial mechanism in the progression from early gastric carcinoma to advanced gastric cancer. The prognostic value of DNA-ploidy in gastric cancers has been a matter of controversy. Tumour DNA-ploidy heterogeneity, the presence within the same tumour of multiple stemlines differing in DNA content, has been described in various tumours including gastric cancers. The occurrence of such heterogeneity has been accepted as an explanation for the divergent DNA-ploidy results in this type of tumours. A previous study of early gastric cancers suggested that in pure diploid superficial carcinomas, genetic instability might lead to a cell clone which has undergone a ploidy shift and is more aggressive. If so, this would initially result in DNA-ploidy heterogeneity. Proliferative dominance of the aneuploid clone could eventually evolve to a homogeneous aneuploid tumour. In order to test this hypothesis, we studied DNA-aneuploidy and DNA-ploidy heterogeneity in advanced gastric carcinomas. We performed DNA cytophotometry on multiple samples collected from 16 advanced gastric carcinomas and found 15 DNA-aneuploid tumours (94%) and one diploid tumour. Multiple DNA-stemlines were found in 4 cases (26%). Analysis of proliferative activity performed on the same samples revealed higher proliferation rate in DNA-ploidy homogeneous tumours than in aneuploid heterogeneous tumours. Heterogeneous tumours did not overexpress p53. These results confirm that DNA-aneuploidy is frequent in advanced gastric cancer and demonstrate that a majority of these aneuploid tumours are not DNA-ploidy heterogeneous. Furthermore, the higher proliferative activity in homogeneous-aneuploid carcinomas and their more frequent overexpression of p53 support the hypothesis that in gastric cancer tumour progression implies the development of a dominant and more aggressive (higher proliferative activity, p53 overexpression) aneuploid cell clone.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15371654      PMCID: PMC4612264          DOI: 10.1155/2004/219293

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Oncol        ISSN: 1570-5870            Impact factor:   6.730


  4 in total

Review 1.  Clinical aspect and molecular mechanism of DNA aneuploidy in gastric cancers.

Authors:  Eiji Oki; Yuichi Hisamatsu; Koji Ando; Hiroshi Saeki; Yoshihiro Kakeji; Yoshihiko Maehara
Journal:  J Gastroenterol       Date:  2012-03-09       Impact factor: 7.527

2.  Survival in patients with stage IV noncardia gastric cancer - the influence of DNA ploidy and Helicobacter pylori infection.

Authors:  John Syrios; Stavros Sougioultzis; Ioannis D Xynos; Nikolaos Kavantzas; Christos Kosmas; George Agrogiannis; John Griniatsos; Ioannis Karavokyros; Emmanouil Pikoulis; Efstratios S Patsouris; Nikolas Tsavaris
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2012-06-21       Impact factor: 4.430

3.  LAPTM4B-35, a cancer-related gene, is associated with poor prognosis in TNM stages I-III gastric cancer patients.

Authors:  Xiaojing Cheng; Zhixue Zheng; Zhaode Bu; Xiaojiang Wu; Lianhai Zhang; Xiaofang Xing; Xiaohong Wang; Ying Hu; Hong Du; Lin Li; Shen Li; Rouli Zhou; Xian-Zi Wen; Jia-Fu Ji
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-04-07       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  The Value of DNA Quantitative Cytology Test for the Screening of Endometrial Cancer.

Authors:  Bao-Hua Yang; Ming-Xia Yu; Jun Xu; Yan Su; Zhi-Hong Ai
Journal:  Cancer Manag Res       Date:  2019-12-11       Impact factor: 3.989

  4 in total

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