| Literature DB >> 22587902 |
Yulia A Savitskaya1, Genaro Rico-Martínez, Luis Miguel Linares-González, Ernesto Andrés Delgado-Cedillo, René Téllez-Gastelum, Alfonso Benito Alfaro-Rodríguez, Antonio Redón-Tavera, José Clemente Ibarra-Ponce de León.
Abstract
Osteosarcoma is the most common primary high-grade bone tumor in both adolescents and children. Early tumor detection is key to ensuring effective treatment. Serum marker discovery and validation for pediatric osteosarcoma has accelerated in recent years, coincident with an evolving understanding of molecules and their complex interactions, and the compelling need for improved pediatric osteosarcoma outcome measures in clinical trials. This review gives a short overview of serological markers for pediatric osteosarcoma, and highlights advances in pediatric osteosarcoma-related marker research within the past year. Studies in the past year involving serum markers in patients with pediatric osteosarcoma can be assigned to one of four categories, i.e., new approaches and new markers, exploratory studies in specialized disease subsets, large cross-sectional validation studies, and longitudinal studies, with and without an intervention.Most of the studies have examined the association of a serum marker with some aspect of the natural history of pediatric osteosarcoma. As illustrated by the many studies reviewed, several serum markers are emerging that show a credible association with disease modification. The expanding pool of informative osteosarcoma-related markers is expected to impact development of therapeutics for pediatric osteosarcoma positively and, it is hoped, ultimately clinical care. Combinations of serum markers of natural immunity, thyroid hormone homeostasis, and bone tumorigenesis may be undertaken together in patients with pediatric osteosarcoma. These serum markers in combination may do better. The potential effect of an intrinsic dynamic balance of tumor angiogenesis residing within a single hormone (tri-iodothyronine) is an attractive concept for regulation of vascularization in pediatric osteosarcoma.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22587902 PMCID: PMC3359274 DOI: 10.1186/2045-3329-2-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Sarcoma Res ISSN: 2045-3329
List of candidate serum markers for pediatric osteosarcoma and their possible clinical utility.
| Serum marker | Observation for pediatric osteosarcoma | Assessed clinical utility for pediatric osteosarcoma | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free polyamines | POS development is accompanied by disorders of polyamine metabolism spurring their intensive release from cells into biological fluids | Informative indicator of a malignant process in POS | Ladanyi et al [ |
| IGF-1 and IGFBP-3 | IGF-1/IGFBP-3 levels correlate with the presence of metastatic disease, histologic response, event-free survival | Promising predictive factor of development or clinical characteristics of POS | Rodriguez-Galindo et al [ |
| anti-ki57 antibody | Increased levels anti-ki57 antibody associated with extent of biological activity of tumor and clinical course of POS | Prognostic factor for POS progression | Petrosyan et al [ |
| TNF-β and sTNF-R | In high-grade POS, high levels of TNF-β correlated with bad response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy | Marker for monitoring of response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in POS | Holzer et al [ |
| ANG | Expression of ANG correlates with an increase in local density of blood vessels in tumor tissue, with development of pulmonary metastasis and poor prognosis | Diagnostic and prognostic factor of primary POS | Kushlinskii et al [ |
| Bone formation/resorption | Decreased production of PICP, OC, ICTP associated with bone metabolism in POS | Risk factor for pathologic bone fractures in POS | Gajewska et al [ |
| T3 | Increased levels T3 associated with poor/good disease-free survival | Marker of good and poor POS prognosis | Sidorenko et al [ |
| CD44 | No significant difference was observed between serum CD44 levels of children with sarcoma and healthy children | Serum CD44 levels were not found to be of value in diagnosis or prognosis for POS | Kebudi et al [ |
| VEGF | Increased VEGF levels correlates with tumor stage and disease-free survival | Prognostic factor in POS | Koznetsova et al [ |
| SAA | Increased SAA levels associated with type of tumor and high-risk POS development | Differentiates malignant bone cancer from benign bone tumors and detects POS in high-risk children | Krizkova et al [ |
| BALP | Increased BALP levels associated with development of POS | Marker for late detecting, monitoring, and assessment of the efficacy of therapy in POS | Ambroszkiewicz et al [ |
| CXC chemokines | Increased CXCL4, CXCL6, and CXCL12 levels associated with poor disease-free survival | Prognostic factor for POS outcomes | Li et al [ |
| IL-2, IL-4, IL-8, IFN-γ, TNF-α | Analysis of cytokine concentration showed large statistically significant differences between POS and control group for IL-4 and IL-8 | Markers for individual reaction of organism to the development of POS | Markiewicz et al [ |