| Literature DB >> 16091764 |
L Boldrini1, V Donati, M Dell'Omodarme, M C Prati, P Faviana, T Camacci, M Lucchi, A Mussi, M Santoro, F Basolo, G Fontanini.
Abstract
Osteopontin (OPN) is a multifunctional protein, which has recently been shown to be linked to tumorigenesis, progression and metastasis in different malignancies. Since non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC)'s prognosis remains bad, with few predictors of outcome, the purpose of this study was to evaluate if OPN might be involved in NSCLC's biology and therefore represent a prognostic marker and a target for new therapeutic trials. Immunohistochemistry was used to detect OPN expression, evaluated as percentage of neoplastic cells with cytoplasmic immunoreactivity, in a wide cohort of patients with stage I NSCLC (136 cases). The median value of this series (20% of positive cells) was used as the cutoff value to distinguish tumours with low (<20%) from tumours with high (> or =20%) OPN expression. A statistically significant correlation between high levels of OPN and shorter overall (P = 0.034) and disease-free (P = 0.011) survival in our patients was shown. Our results support the hypothesis that high OPN expression is a significantly unfavourable prognostic factor for the survival of patients with stage I NSCLC. This conclusion has notable importance in terms of the biological characterization of early-stage tumours and therapeutic opportunities.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16091764 PMCID: PMC2361587 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6602715
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Osteopontin expression detected by immunohistochemical staining in two adenocarcinomas (A × 100; B × 200) and in two squamous-cell carcinomas (C, D × 200) of the lung.
Univariate analysis of the associations between prognostic variables and overall survival or disease-free survival in 136 cases of stage I non-small-cell lung cancer
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| Male | 126 | ||
| Female | 10 | 0.37 | 0.56 |
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| ⩽66 | 64 | ||
| >66 | 72 | 0.48 | 0.47 |
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| G1 | 39 | ||
| G2 | 57 | ||
| G3 | 40 | 0.070 | 0.0059 |
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| Squamous | 84 | ||
| Nonsquamous | 52 | 0.79 | 0.88 |
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| T1 | 54 | ||
| T2 | 82 | 0.39 | 0.37 |
| Low (<20) | 65 | ||
| High (⩾20) | 71 | 0.034 | 0.011 |
| 0 | 38 | ||
| + | 40 | ||
| ++ | 36 | ||
| +++ | 22 | 0.11 | 0.090 |
P-values of Mann–Whitney t-test and Kruskal–Wallis tests comparing OPN expression and different clinicopathological characteristics in 136 cases of stage I non-small-cell lung cancers
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| Sex | 0.006 |
| Age | 0.25 |
| Histology | 0.75 |
| G | 0.00004 |
| Relapse | 0.02 |
Multivariate analysis of overall survival according to Cox's model for stage I patients (final model obtained with a backward stepwise regression)
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| OPN % high | 0.631 | 1.88 | 0.303 | 2.08 | 0.037 |
Likelihood ratio test=4.53 on 1 df, P=0.033, n=136. Proportional hazard test P=0.09. β=Cox regression's coefficient, exp(β)=risk ratio, z=Wald statistics, P=Wald's test P-value.
Figure 2Kaplan–Meier curves for overall survival. Curve 1: Tumour stage I, low OPN expression, mean survival MS 107 months, standard error (s.e.) 6 months. Curve 2: Stage I, high OPN, MS 84 months, s.e. 6 months.
Figure 3Kaplan–Meier curves for disease-free survival. Curve 1: Tumour stage I, low OPN expression, mean survival MS 104 months, standard error (s.e.) 7 months. Curve 2: Stage I, high OPN, MS 73 months, s.e. 7 months.