| Literature DB >> 20034397 |
Subhash C Chauhan1, Deepak Kumar, Meena Jaggi.
Abstract
Ovarian cancer is the most lethal gynecologic malignancy and the five-year survival rate is only 35% after diagnosis. Epithelial ovarian cancer is a highly metastatic disease characterized by widespread peritoneal dissemination and ascites. The death incidences from ovarian cancer could be significantly lowered by developing new methods for the early diagnosis and treatment of this fatal disease. Several potential markers have been identified recently. However, mucins are the most promising markers for ovarian cancer diagnosis. Mucins are large extracellular, heavily glycosylated proteins and their aberrant expression has been implicated in the pathogenesis of a variety of cancers, including ovarian cancer. This review will summarize known facts about the pathological and molecular characteristics of ovarian cancer, the current status of ovarian cancer markers, as well as general information about mucins, the putative role of mucins in the progression of ovarian cancer and their potential use for the early diagnosis and treatment of this disease.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20034397 PMCID: PMC2804676 DOI: 10.1186/1757-2215-2-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ovarian Res ISSN: 1757-2215 Impact factor: 4.234
Classification of ovarian tumors
| Germ cell neoplasm (3%) Mostly diagnosed under the age of 30 | Gonado-stromal tumors (6%) No particular pattern with age | |
|---|---|---|
| Serous | Teratomas | Granulosa cell tumors |
| Mucinous | Mature cyst teratomas | Thecomas |
| Endometroid | Immature teratomas | Fibrosarcomas |
| Clear cell | Dysgerminomas | Sertoli cell tumors |
| Transitional cell or Brenner tumors | Yolk sac tumors | Leydig cell tumors |
Metastatic tumors: Ovaries may have tumors due to secondary metastatis of stomach, colon, pancreas, appendix, breast, and hematopoietic system.
Stage and Features of the Ovarian Tumors
| Stage | Features | % 5 year Survival |
|---|---|---|
| Stage I | Tumor growth is limited to the one or both the ovaries | 60-90 |
| Stage II | Tumor growth in the one or both the ovaries with extension in the pelvis | 37-66 |
| Stage III | Tumor growth involves one or both ovaries with extension and intraperitoneal metastasis extended to the bowel, to the lining of the abdominal cavity, or to the lymph nodes | 5-50 |
| Stage IV | Tumor growth in one or both ovaries with distant metastases to other organs such as lungs liver or in the chest | 0-17 |
Comparative expression profile of mucins in different stages and histological types of ovarian cancer
| Gene | Normal Ovary | Borderline | Low Stage (Stage 1-2) | High Stage (Stage 3-4) | Detection method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MUC1 | +/- | ++ | + to +++ (in all histological types i.e. C, M, E, S) | + to +++ (in all histological types i.e. C, M, E, S) | ISH, NB, IHC [ |
| MUC2 | ND | +++ | +++ (all histological types, primarily in mucinous type) | + to ++ | ISH, NB, IHC [ |
| MUC3 | ND | +++ (primarily in intestinal phenotype | +++ (E, M) | - to + | ISH, NB [ |
| MUC4 | - | +++ (primarily in endocervical phenotype) | +++ (all types i.e. C, M, E, S) | - to ++ | ISH, NB, IHC [ |
| MUC5AC | ND | ++ (primarily in gastric surface cell or mucinous type) | ++ (E, M, S) | ++ | ISH, NB, [ |
| MUC5B | ND | ++ (Express primarily in endocervical phenotype) | ++ (C, S) | - to + | ISH, NB [ |
| MUC13 | ND | + | +++ (S, M) | ++ (S, M) | OMA, TMA, IHC [ |
| CA125/MUC16 | - | - (express in non-mucinous borderline tumors | - to +++ (rarely express in mucinous tumors) | + to +++ (rarely express in mucinous tumors) | IHC [ |
| MUC17 | - | + | - | - | [ |
Note: C, M, E, and S are abbreviated for clear cell, mucinous, endometroid and serous histological types of ovarian tumors, respectively.
ISH, in-situ hybridization; NB, northern blotting; IHC, immunohistochemistry, TMA, tissue microarray, OMA, oligonucleotide microarray
Figure 1Expression of MUC1 (A), MUC13 (B) and MUC16/CA125 (C) trans-membrane mucins in ovarian tumors.
Some mucin-based and other emerging therapies for ovarian cancer treatment [88-94]
| Antibody targeting | Vaccines | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Antibody-based | Antigen-based | Cell-based | |
| Anti-HER2/neu antibody (Herceptin) [In use] | Idiotypic vaccination with anti-MUC1 HMFG1MAb [Phase I trial] | MUC1 presenting Immunogens [Phase I] | Fusions of ovarian carcinoma cells and dendritic cells (DC) [Preclinical] |
| 90Y-labelled anti-MUC1 HMFG1 MAb [Phase 1] | Anti-CA-125 B43.13 MAb vaccine (OvaRex) [Phase IIb] | Peptides derived from a folate binding protein [Phase 1] | MUC1 RNA transfected dendritic cells [Preclinical] |
| 131I-labelled OC125 MAb [Phase I/II] | Anti-idiotypic antibody ACA-125 vaccine [Phase I/II] | Synthetic Lewis (y)-protein conjugate vaccine [Phase 1] | Genetically engineered GM-CSF producing tumor cells |
| 131I-labelled MOv8 chimeric MAb [Phase 1] | Her2/neu presenting peptides vaccines [Phase 1] | Her2/neu and MUC1 peptide pulsed dendritic cells [Pilot study] | |
| Nano-RIT with CA125 and anti-HER2 MAb [Under investigation] | Theratope STn-KLH cancer vaccine [Phase 1] | Dendritic cells pulsed with tumor-lysate | |