| Literature DB >> 25884692 |
Manlio Mattioni1, Silvia Soddu2, Andrea Prodosmo3, Paolo Visca4, Salvatore Conti5, Gabriele Alessandrini6, Francesco Facciolo7, Lidia Strigari8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mutations in the TP53 (Tumour Protein 53) gene can lead to expression of mutant p53 proteins that accumulate in cancer cells and can induce circulating p53 antibodies in cancer patients. Our aim was to evaluate the presence and prognostic role of these antibodies in lung cancer patients and to investigate whether they were related to p53 expression or TP53 mutations in tumour tissues.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25884692 PMCID: PMC4374590 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-015-1174-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Patient characteristics
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|
| ≤60 | 47 (23.4%) | 27 (50.0%) |
| >60 | 154 (76.6%) | 27 (50.0%) |
| Total | 201 | 54 |
|
| ||
| Male | 157 (78.1%) | 27 (50.0%) |
| Female | 44 (21.9%) | 27 (50.0%) |
| Total | 201 | 54 |
|
| ||
| NSCLC | ||
|
| 79 (39.3%) | |
|
| 70 (34.8%) | |
|
| 6 (3.0%) | |
|
| 5 (2.5%) | |
|
| 19 (9.4%) | |
|
| 9 (4.5%) | |
| SCLC | 13 (6.5%) | |
| Total | 201 | |
|
| ||
| I | 68 (36.2%) | |
| II | 24 (12.8%) | |
| III | 40 (21.3%) | |
| IV | 45 (23.9%) | |
| Missing | 11 (5.9%) | |
| Total | 188 | |
|
| ||
| G1 | 4 (2.1%) | |
| G2 | 57 (30.3%) | |
| G3 | 72 (38.3%) | |
| Missing | 55 (29.3%) | |
| Total | 188 |
Figure 1Immunohistochemistry of p53 in a lung adenocarcinoma. A) p53 positive: strong p53 immunoreactivity of the nuclei. B) p53 negative: no p53 nuclear staining. Magnification ×20.
Primers for exon 2–11 amplification and sequencing analysis
|
| Fw | 5′ GGTTGGAAGTGTCTCATGC 3′ |
| Rv | 5′ TTCGCTTCCCACAGGTCTC 3′* | |
|
| Fw | 5′ AGAGACCTGTGGGAAGCGA 3′* |
| Rv | 5′ GCAGTCAGAGGACCAGGT 3′ | |
|
| Fw | 5′ TGGTCCTCTGACTGCTCTT 3′ |
| Rv | 5′ AAGAAGCCCAGACGGAAACC 3′* | |
|
| Fw | 5′ AGCTCCCAGAATGCCAGAG 3′* |
| Rv | 5′ CAGGCATTGAAGTCTCATGG 3′ | |
|
| Fw | 5′GCCCTGACTTTCAACTCTG 3′ |
| Rv | 5′ GGCAACCAGCCCTGTCGT 3′* | |
|
| Fw | 5′ CAGGCCTCTGATTCCTCAC 3′ |
| Rv | 5′ CTACTGCTCACCTGGAGG 3′* | |
|
| Fw | 5′ CTTGGGCCTGTGTTATCTC 3′ |
| Rv | 5′AAATCGGTAAGAGGTGGGC 3′* | |
|
| Fw | 5′ ACAAGGGTGGTTGGGAGTAG 3′* |
| Rv | 5′ CCTCCACCGCTTCTTGTCC 3′ | |
|
| Fw | 5′CAAGAAGCGGTGGAGGAGA 3′* |
| Rv | 5′ TCCACTTGATAAGAGGTCCCA 3′ | |
|
| Fw | 5′ CCATCTTTTAACTCAGGTACTG 3′ |
| Rv | 5′TGAAGGCAGGATGAGAATGG 3′* | |
|
| Fw | 5′CACAGACCCTCTCACTCAT 3′ |
| Rv | 5′TCCTGGGTGCTTCTGACG 3′* |
*Primers used for sequencing; Fw, forward; Rv, reverse.
Serum p53Abs in lung cancer patients and controls, p53 content in lung cancer tissues
| No. of cases | No. of positive | No. of low/negative | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lung cancer sera | 201 | 41a (20.4%) | 160a (79.6%) |
| Control sera | 54 | 0a | 54a |
| Lung cancer tissues | 131 | 75b (57.3%) | 56b (42.7%) |
ap53Ab, bp53 protein expression.
Relationship between serum p53Abs and p53 tumour staining in lung cancer patients
| p53 tumour staining | No. of p53Ab-positive | No. of p53Ab- low/negative | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positive | 19 (86.4%) | 56 (51.4%) | 0.005 |
| Negative | 3 (13.6%) | 53 (48.6%) |
Correlation between serum p53Abs and clinicopathologic features
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|
| ≤60 | 47 | 11 (23.4%) |
| >60 | 154 | 30 (19.5%) |
|
| ||
| Male | 157 | 29 (18.5%) |
| Female | 44 | 12 (27.3%) |
|
| ||
| NSCLC | ||
|
| 79 | 10 (12.7%) |
|
| 70 | 18 (25.7%) |
|
| 6 | 0 (0%) |
|
| 5 | 1 (20.0%) |
|
| 19 | 5 (26.3%) |
|
| 9 | 2 (22.2%) |
| SCLC | 13 | 5 (38.5%) |
|
| ||
| I | 68 | 7 (10.3%) |
| II | 24 | 7 (29.2%) |
| III | 40 | 9 (22.5%) |
| IV | 45 | 9 (20.0%) |
| Missing | 11 | 4 (36.4%) |
| Total | 188 | 36 (19.1%) |
| II-IV | 109 | 25 (22.9%) |
|
| ||
| G1 | 4 | 0 (0%) |
| G2 | 57 | 4 (7.0%) |
| G3 | 72 | 18 (25.0%) |
| Missing | 55 | 14 (25.5%) |
| Total | 188 | 36 (19.1%) |
Relationship between p53 overexpression and clinicopathologic parameters
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|
| ≤60 | 27 | 16 (59.3%) |
| >60 | 104 | 59 (56.7%) |
| Total | 131 | 75 (57.3%) |
|
| ||
| Male | 101 | 57 (56.4%) |
| Female | 30 | 18 (60.0%) |
| Total | 131 | 75 (57.3%) |
|
| ||
| NSCLC | ||
|
| 59 | 26 (44.1%) |
|
| 46 | 33 (71.7%) |
|
| 5 | 1 (20.0%) |
|
| 4 | 4 (100%) |
|
| 4 | 4 (100%) |
|
| 5 | 1 (20.0%) |
| SCLC | 8 | 6 (75.0%) |
| Total | 131 | 75 (57.3%) |
|
| ||
| I | 62 | 35 (56.4%) |
| II | 17 | 9 (52.9%) |
| III | 22 | 15 (68.2%) |
| IV | 18 | 8 (44.4%) |
| Missing | 4 | 2 (50.0%) |
| Total | 123 | 69 (56.1%) |
|
| ||
| G1 | 3 | 1 (33.3%) |
| G2 | 53 | 21 (39.6%) |
| G3 | 60 | 40 (66.7%) |
| Missing | 7 | 7 (100%) |
| Total | 123 | 69 (56.1%) |
Figure 2Overlap between p53Ab-positivity, p53 expression andmutation in lung cancer patients (n = 65). * Percentage of tumour cells showing p53 staining.
Details of lung cancer patients with mutations in their tumours
| Patient number | Sex | Age | Histology* | TNM | G§ | p53Abs | IHC | Exon | Codon | Nucleic acid change | Aminoacid change |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 | M | 70 | SCC | IB | 3 | N& | P# | 2 | 12 | c.35C > T | Pro12Leu |
| 4 | M | 70 | ADC | IB | 3 | P | P | 2 | 12 | c.35C > T | Pro12Leu |
| 54 | M | 59 | ADC | IIB | 3 | N | N | 4 | 66-81 | c.196_241del46 | Frameshift |
| 1 | M | 72 | SCC | IA | 3 | N | P | 4 | 110 | c.329G > T | Arg110Leu |
| 55 | M | 77 | SCC | IA | 3 | N | N | 5 | 152 | c.456delG | Frameshift |
| 10 | F | 55 | SCC | IIB | 3 | N | P | 5 | 154 | c.460_474del15 | Frameshift |
| 2 | M | 65 | LCC | IB | 3 | N | P | 5 | 157 | c.469G > T | Val157Phe |
| 5 | M | 41 | APC | IIB | 3 | P | P | 5 | 158 | c.473G > T | Arg158Leu |
| 3 | M | 76 | SCC | IIB | 3 | N | P | 5 | 159 | c.475G > C | Ala159Pro |
| 7 | M | 73 | SCC | IB | 2 | N | P | 5 | 167 | c.501G > T | Gln167His |
| 11 | F | 68 | ADC | IB | 2 | N | P | 6 | 199-200 | c.596_598delGAA | Frameshift |
| 56 | M | 70 | ADC | IA | 2 | N | N | 8 | 269 | c.807delC | Frameshift |
| 6 | F | 82 | ADC | IIB | 2 | P | P | 8 | 273 | c.817C > T | Arg273Cys |
| 9 | M | 50 | ADC | IB | 3 | N | P | 8 | 282 | c.844C > T | Arg282Trp |
| 12 | F | 70 | SCC | IB | 2 | N | P | 8 | 288 | c.862delA | Frameshift |
| 13 | M | 79 | SCC | IIB | 3 | N | P | 8 | 288 | c.862delA | Frameshift |
*SCC, squamous cell carcinoma; ADC, adenocarcinoma; APC, anaplastic carcinoma; LCC, large cell carcinoma. §Grade; &Low/Negative, #Positive.
Comparison of mutations and clinicopathologic features
|
|
| |
|---|---|---|
| ≤60 | 12 | 4 (33.3%) |
| >60 | 53 | 12 (22.7%) |
| Total | 65 | 16 (24.6%) |
|
| ||
| Male | 51 | 12 (23.5%) |
| Female | 14 | 4 (28.6%) |
| Total | 65 | 16 (24.6%) |
|
| ||
| NSCLC | ||
|
| 27 | 6 (22.2%) |
|
| 27 | 8 (29.6%) |
|
| 2 | 0 (0%) |
|
| 4 | 1 (25.0%) |
|
| 2 | 1 (50.0%) |
|
| 2 | 0 (0%) |
| SCLC | 1 | 0 (0%) |
| Total | 65 | 16 (24.6%) |
|
| ||
| I | 41 | 10 (24.4%) |
| II | 9 | 6 (66.7%) |
| III | 10 | 0 (0%) |
| IV | 4 | 0 (0%) |
| Total | 64 | 16 (25.0%) |
|
| ||
| G1-G2 | 28 | 5 (17.9%) |
| G3 | 35 | 11 (31.4%) |
| Missing | 1 | 0 (0%) |
| Total | 64 | 16 (25.0%) |
Figure 3Survival curves of NSCLC patients with p53Ab-positive or p53Ab-low/negative- serum. Survival curves of NSCLC patients with p53Ab-positive-serum (dotted line, n = 36) or p53Ab-low/negative-serum (unbroken line, n = 152). Patients with p53Ab-low/negative-serum had a significantly longer overall survival than those with p53Ab-positive-serum (p = 0.049).
Figure 4Survival curves of squamous cell carcinoma patients with p53Ab-positive or p53Ab-low/negative-serum. Survival curves of patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the lung with p53Ab-positive-serum (dotted line, n = 18) or p53Ab-low/negative-serum (unbroken line, n = 52). Patients with p53Ab-low/negative-serum showed a significantly longer overall survival than those with p53Ab-positive- serum (p = 0.044).
Figure 5Survival curves of adenocarcinoma patients with p53Ab-positive or p53Ab-low/negative-serum. Survival curves of patients with adenocarcinoma of the lung with p53Ab-positive-serum (dotted line, n = 10) or p53Ab-low/negative-serum (unbroken line, n = 69). No difference in overall survival was observed between the two groups (p = 0.973).