Literature DB >> 22705054

Genomic deletion of PTEN is associated with tumor progression and early PSA recurrence in ERG fusion-positive and fusion-negative prostate cancer.

Antje Krohn1, Tobias Diedler, Lia Burkhardt, Pascale-Sophie Mayer, Colin De Silva, Marie Meyer-Kornblum, Darja Kötschau, Pierre Tennstedt, Joseph Huang, Clarissa Gerhäuser, Malte Mader, Stefan Kurtz, Hüseyin Sirma, Fred Saad, Thomas Steuber, Markus Graefen, Christoph Plass, Guido Sauter, Ronald Simon, Sarah Minner, Thorsten Schlomm.   

Abstract

The phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome 10 (PTEN) gene is often altered in prostate cancer. To determine the prevalence and clinical significance of the different mechanisms of PTEN inactivation, we analyzed PTEN deletions in TMAs containing 4699 hormone-naïve and 57 hormone-refractory prostate cancers using fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis. PTEN mutations and methylation were analyzed in subsets of 149 and 34 tumors, respectively. PTEN deletions were present in 20.2% (458/2266) of prostate cancers, including 8.1% heterozygous and 12.1% homozygous deletions, and were linked to advanced tumor stage (P < 0.0001), high Gleason grade (P < 0.0001), presence of lymph node metastasis (P = 0.0002), hormone-refractory disease (P < 0.0001), presence of ERG gene fusion (P < 0.0001), and nuclear p53 accumulation (P < 0.0001). PTEN deletions were also associated with early prostate-specific antigen recurrence in univariate (P < 0.0001) and multivariate (P = 0.0158) analyses. The prognostic impact of PTEN deletion was seen in both ERG fusion-positive and ERG fusion-negative tumors. PTEN mutations were found in 4 (12.9%) of 31 cancers with heterozygous PTEN deletions but in only 1 (2%) of 59 cancers without PTEN deletion (P = 0.027). Aberrant PTEN promoter methylation was not detected in 34 tumors. The results of this study demonstrate that biallelic PTEN inactivation, by either homozygous deletion or deletion of one allele and mutation of the other, occurs in most PTEN-defective cancers and characterizes a particularly aggressive subset of metastatic and hormone-refractory prostate cancers.
Copyright © 2012 American Society for Investigative Pathology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22705054     DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2012.04.026

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Pathol        ISSN: 0002-9440            Impact factor:   4.307


  132 in total

1.  In prostate cancer needle biopsies, detections of PTEN loss by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and by immunohistochemistry (IHC) are concordant and show consistent association with upgrading.

Authors:  C G Picanço-Albuquerque; C L Morais; F L F Carvalho; S B Peskoe; J L Hicks; O Ludkovski; T Vidotto; H Fedor; E Humphreys; M Han; E A Platz; A M De Marzo; D M Berman; T L Lotan; J A Squire
Journal:  Virchows Arch       Date:  2016-02-09       Impact factor: 4.064

Review 2.  The mutational landscape of prostate cancer.

Authors:  Christopher E Barbieri; Chris H Bangma; Anders Bjartell; James W F Catto; Zoran Culig; Henrik Grönberg; Jun Luo; Tapio Visakorpi; Mark A Rubin
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2013-05-18       Impact factor: 20.096

3.  PTEN loss and ERG protein expression are infrequent in prostatic ductal adenocarcinomas and concurrent acinar carcinomas.

Authors:  Carlos L Morais; Mehsati Herawi; Antoun Toubaji; Roula Albadine; Jessica Hicks; George J Netto; Angelo M De Marzo; Jonathan I Epstein; Tamara L Lotan
Journal:  Prostate       Date:  2015-07-14       Impact factor: 4.104

4.  Genomic Drivers of Poor Prognosis and Enzalutamide Resistance in Metastatic Castration-resistant Prostate Cancer.

Authors:  William S Chen; Rahul Aggarwal; Li Zhang; Shuang G Zhao; George V Thomas; Tomasz M Beer; David A Quigley; Adam Foye; Denise Playdle; Jiaoti Huang; Paul Lloyd; Eric Lu; Duanchen Sun; Xiangnan Guan; Matthew Rettig; Martin Gleave; Christopher P Evans; Jack Youngren; Lawrence True; Primo Lara; Vishal Kothari; Zheng Xia; Kim N Chi; Robert E Reiter; Christopher A Maher; Felix Y Feng; Eric J Small; Joshi J Alumkal
Journal:  Eur Urol       Date:  2019-03-28       Impact factor: 20.096

5.  Restoration of PTEN activity decreases metastases in an orthotopic model of colon cancer.

Authors:  Sanjib Chowdhury; Melanie Ongchin; Guanghua Wan; Elizabeth Sharratt; Michael G Brattain; Ashwani Rajput
Journal:  J Surg Res       Date:  2013-04-06       Impact factor: 2.192

6.  Identification of Combinatorial Genomic Abnormalities Associated with Prostate Cancer Early Recurrence.

Authors:  Xiaoyu Qu; Claudio Jeldres; Lena Glaskova; Cynthia Friedman; Sarah Schroeder; Peter S Nelson; Christopher Porter; Min Fang
Journal:  J Mol Diagn       Date:  2016-01-02       Impact factor: 5.568

7.  Loss of PTEN expression in ERG-negative prostate cancer predicts secondary therapies and leads to shorter disease-specific survival time after radical prostatectomy.

Authors:  Kanerva Lahdensuo; Andrew Erickson; Irena Saarinen; Heikki Seikkula; Johan Lundin; Mikael Lundin; Stig Nordling; Anna Bützow; Hanna Vasarainen; Peter J Boström; Pekka Taimen; Antti Rannikko; Tuomas Mirtti
Journal:  Mod Pathol       Date:  2016-08-26       Impact factor: 7.842

8.  Integrated analysis of the genomic instability of PTEN in clinically insignificant and significant prostate cancer.

Authors:  Stephen J Murphy; Robert J Karnes; Farhad Kosari; B Edgardo R Parilla Castellar; Benjamin R Kipp; Sarah H Johnson; Simone Terra; Faye R Harris; Geoffrey C Halling; Janet L Schaefer Klein; Aqsa Nasir; Eric Bergstrahl; Laureano J Rangel; William R Sukov; George Vasmatzis; John C Cheville
Journal:  Mod Pathol       Date:  2015-11-27       Impact factor: 7.842

9.  A Prospective Investigation of PTEN Loss and ERG Expression in Lethal Prostate Cancer.

Authors:  Thomas U Ahearn; Andreas Pettersson; Ericka M Ebot; Travis Gerke; Rebecca E Graff; Carlos L Morais; Jessica L Hicks; Kathryn M Wilson; Jennifer R Rider; Howard D Sesso; Michelangelo Fiorentino; Richard Flavin; Stephen Finn; Edward L Giovannucci; Massimo Loda; Meir J Stampfer; Angelo M De Marzo; Lorelei A Mucci; Tamara L Lotan
Journal:  J Natl Cancer Inst       Date:  2015-11-27       Impact factor: 13.506

10.  p16 upregulation is linked to poor prognosis in ERG negative prostate cancer.

Authors:  Christoph Burdelski; Tatsiana Dieckmann; Asmus Heumann; Claudia Hube-Magg; Martina Kluth; Burkhard Beyer; Thomas Steuber; Raisa Pompe; Markus Graefen; Ronald Simon; Sarah Minner; Maria Christina Tsourlakis; Christina Koop; Jakob Izbicki; Guido Sauter; Till Krech; Thorsten Schlomm; Waldemar Wilczak; Patrick Lebok
Journal:  Tumour Biol       Date:  2016-07-21
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