| Literature DB >> 21318053 |
Josena K Stephen1, Kang Mei Chen, Veena Shah, Shaleta Havard, Alissa Kapke, Mei Lu, Michael S Benninger, Maria J Worsham.
Abstract
This study examined molecular (DNA hypermethylation), clinical, histopathological, demographical, smoking, and alcohol variables to assess diagnosis (early versus late stage) and prognosis (survival) outcomes in a retrospective primary laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma (LSCC) cohort. The study cohort of 79 primary LSCC was drawn from a multi-ethnic (37% African American), primary care patient population, diagnosed by surgical biopsies in the Henry Ford Health System from 1991-2004, and followed from 5-18 years (through 2009). Of the 41 variables, univariate risk factors of p<0.10 were tested in multivariate models (logistic regression {diagnosis} and Cox {survival} models {p<0.05}). Aberrant methylation of ESR1 (p=0.01), race as African American (p=0.04), and tumor necrosis (extensive) (p=0.02) were independent predictors of late stage LSCC. Independent predictors of poor survival included presence of vascular invasion (p=0.0009), late stage disease (p=0.03) and methylation of the HIC1 gene (p=0.0002). Aberrant methylation of ESR1 and HIC1 signified independent markers of poorer outcome. In this multi-ethnic, primary LSCC cohort, race remained a predictor of late stage disease supporting disparate diagnosis outcomes for African American patients with LSCC.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21318053 PMCID: PMC3037188 DOI: 10.1007/s13148-010-0005-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Epigenetics ISSN: 1868-7075 Impact factor: 6.551
Fig. 1a A normal control DNA sample generates 41 individual peaks for all probes in the absence of HhaI (red) and 15 separate peaks in the presence of HhaI (blue). b Aberrant methylation identified in tumor sample as the appearance of a signal peak that is otherwise absent in normal DNA samples, seen here for APC, CHFR, DAPK1, and ESR1
Cohort characteristics
| Variable | Response | Early stage, | Late stage, | Unknown stage, |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Race | African American | 11 | 20 | 1 |
| Caucasian American | 27 | 18 | – | |
| Other | – | 2 | – | |
| Gender | Male | 29 | 29 | 1 |
| Female | 9 | 11 | – | |
| Age | Less than 50 years | 18 | 16 | 1 |
| 51–65 years | 14 | 17 | – | |
| Over 65 years | 6 | 7 | – | |
| Smoking | Current smoker | 21 | 26 | 1 |
| Past smoker | 16 | 11 | – | |
| Never smoker | 1 | 3 | – | |
| Alcohol usea | No | 1 | 1 | – |
| Yes | 31 | 35 | 1 |
aMissing for ten LSCC
Multivariable stage model
| Variable | OR | 95% confidence limits | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16.35 | 1.75 | 152.5 | 0.014 | |
| Tumor necrosis: extensive vs none | 5.15 | 1.33 | 20.01 | 0.018 |
| Race: African American vs Caucasian American | 3.17 | 1.08 | 9.26 | 0.035 |
Multivariable survival model
| Variable | Hazard ratio | 95% confidence limits | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stage: late vs early | 2.16 | 1.08 | 4.32 | 0.029 |
| 9.52 | 2.92 | 31.01 | 0.0002 | |
| Vascular invasion: identified vs not identified | 4.51 | 1.86 | 10.93 | 0.0009 |
Fig. 2Patients with vascular invasion (n = 8) had a significantly shorter survival time as compared to patients without vascular invasion (n = 69)
Fig. 3Patients with late stage disease (n = 40, stage 3 and 4) had poorer survival as compared to those with early stage disease (n = 38, stage 0, 1, and 2)
Fig. 4Methylation of HIC1 was an independent predictor of poorer survival. LSCC patients without HIC1 methylation (n = 74) had a median survival of 4.40 (range, 0.04 to 16.21) as compared to a median survival of 1.02 years (range, 0.044 to 2.88) for patients (n = 5) with HIC1 methylation