| Literature DB >> 15611789 |
H Tanimoto1, K Shigemasa, X Tian, L Gu, J B Beard, T Sawasaki, T J O'Brien.
Abstract
Tumour-associated differentially expressed gene-15 (TADG-15/ST14/matriptase/MT-SP1) is a novel member of the transmembrane serine proteases. Previous studies indicated that TADG-15 is overexpressed in ovarian tumours; however, relationships between expression of TADG-15 and clinical characteristics of ovarian cancer remain unclear. The purpose of this study was to examine TADG-15 expression in ovarian cancers and determine any associations with clinicopathological characteristics or patient survival. Immunohistochemical study revealed that TADG-15 was expressed in 50 (56.2%) of 89 ovarian carcinomas, whereas it was not detected in normal ovaries. TADG-15 expression was significantly more common in patients with early stage disease compared with patients with advanced stage diseases (namely, stage I, 24 out of 33: 72.7%; stage II/III/IV, 26 out of 56: 46.4%; P=0.0157). Kaplan-Meier survival curves demonstrated that patients with TADG-15-positive tumours have had substantially longer survival (P=0.0480). The mean value of relative TADG-15 mRNA expression ratio was significantly higher in stage I tumours than in stage II/III/IV tumours (P=0.0053). Increased expression of TADG-15 is frequently detected in early stage cancers, with expression level downregulated during progression of disease. TADG-15 is associated with early stage ovarian cancer and longer patient survival; therefore, it may be a favourable prognostic marker for this malignancy.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15611789 PMCID: PMC2361855 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6602320
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Immunohistochemistry. TADG-15 is absent in normal ovarian surface epithelial cells (A, × 100). Positive TADG-15 staining is observed in serous (B, × 100), endometrioid (C, × 100), and clear cell adenocarcinoma (D, × 100). Negative control section showed no nonspecific staining (E, same tumour as shown in D, × 50).
Expression of TADG-15 in relationship to age, clinical stage, histological type, and histological grade in patients with ovarian carcinomas
|
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ovarian carcinoma | 89 | 50 (56.2) | |
| 0.2776 | |||
| <50 | 40 | 25 (62.5) | |
| >51 | 49 | 25 (51.0) | |
|
| 0.0157 | ||
| Stage I | 33 | 24 (72.7) | |
| Stage II/III/IV | 56 | 26 (46.4) | |
|
| 0.0035 | ||
| Serous | 39 | 17 (43.6) | |
| Mucinous | 19 | 10 (52.6) | |
| Endometrioid | 17 | 9 (52.9) | |
| Clear cell | 14 | 14 (100) | |
|
| 0.2442 | ||
| Grade 1 | 54 | 33 (61.1) | |
| Grade 2/3 | 35 | 17 (48.6) |
χ2-test.
Statistically significant.
Univariate and multivariate analysis on the influence of age, clinical stage, histological grade, and TADG-15 expression status on overall survival in patients with ovarian cancer
|
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Patient age (<50 years | 0.0008 | 0.525 | 0.246–1.121 | 0.0959 |
| Clinical stage (stage I | <0.0001 | 0.050 | 0.011–0.223 | <0.0001 |
| Histological grade (grade 1 | 0.0043 | 0.705 | 0.371–1.342 | 0.2872 |
| TADG-15 expression (positive | 0.0480 | 1.097 | 0.577–2.087 | 0.7768 |
Log-rank test.
Cox proportional hazard model.
RR, risk ratio.
CI, 95% confidence interval.
Figure 2Log-rank testing shows that positive TADG-15 expression is significantly correlated with favourable overall survival in ovarian cancer patients (negative vs positive TADG-15 expression, P=0.0480).
Figure 3Semiquantitative PCR analysis of TADG-15 expression. Expression levels of TADG-15 relative to β-tubulin are significantly elevated in carcinomas compared with levels in normal ovaries.
Relative expression levels of TADG-15 mRNA in normal ovaries and ovarian carcinomas
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|
| Normal ovary | 7 | 0.19±0.19 |
|
| 51 | 1.76±0.47 |
| Clinical stage of carcinoma | ||
| Stage I | 21 | 1.98±0.57 |
| Stage II/III/IV | 30 | 1.61±0.32 |
s.d.=standard deviation.
Normal vs carcinoma; P<0.0001.
Stage I vs stage II/III/IV; P=0.0053.
All P-values were calculated using an unpaired t-test.