| Literature DB >> 27439755 |
Hassan Ashktorab1, Pia Hermann2, Mehdi Nouraie3, Babak Shokrani4, Edward Lee4, Tahmineh Haidary3, Hassan Brim5, Ulrike Stein6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Colorectal cancer is a preventable disease if caught at early stages. This disease is highly aggressive and has a higher incidence in African Americans. Several biomarkers and mutations of aggressive tumor behavior have been defined such as metastasis-associated in colon cancer 1 (MACC1) that was associated with metastasis in colorectal cancer patients. Here, we aim to assess colon tissue MACC1 protein and circulating MACC1 transcripts in colon preneoplastic and neoplastic African American patients.Entities:
Keywords: Adenoma; Colorectal cancer; MACC1; Prognosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27439755 PMCID: PMC4955242 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-016-0971-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Distribution of demographic and clinical characteristics by diagnosis
| Normal | Adenoma | CRC | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male gender, no (%) | 12 (46 %) | 38 (56 %) | 23 (48 %) | 0.6 |
| Age, median (IQR) | 62 (52–74) | 59 (52–64) | 67 (54–76) | 0.004 |
| Age ≥60 years, no (%) | 16 (62 %) | 27 (43 %) | 30 (64 %) | 0.06 |
| Location | NA | 0.07 | ||
| Right colon | 37 (54 %) | 18 (38 %) | ||
| Left colon | 31 (46 %) | 30 (63 %) | ||
| Mass size, median (IQR) | NA | 1.5 (1.3–2.0) | 4.0 (2.5–5.5) | <0.001 |
Fig. 1MACC1 TMA IHC of patients’ tissue samples. Representative MACC1 IHC show cytoplasmic staining for normal colon tissue (intensity = 1), for two adenomas (intensity = 2), and for two colorectal cancer samples (Cancer 1: intensity = 3 and Cancer 2, intensity = 4). MACC1 protein expression levels were higher in adenoma samples vs. normal tissues (p = 0.004), and were higher in cancer samples vs. normal tissues (p < 0.001). No major differences in MACC1 expression levels were found between adenoma vs. cancer cases or tubular adenomas vs tubulovillous adenomas. Sections treated without the primary antibody served as controls. Images are presented for 20× magnification
Distribution of cytoplasmic percentage (C %) staining by diagnosis
| Normal | Adenoma | CRC | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| C % staining, median (IQR) | 95 (80–100) | 100 (100–100) | 100 (100–100) | <0.001 |
| Positive intensity, no (%) | 23 (92 %) | 64 (94 %) | 41 (89 %) | 0.6 |
Fig. 2MACC1 cytoplasmic percentage (C %) staining to diagnose between adenoma vs. normal and cancer vs. normal tissues. Both adenoma and CRC samples had significantly higher staining percentages compared with normal tissue. Adenoma vs CRC cases had similar MACC1 staining (ROC (95 % CI) 0.47 (0.40–0.55, not shown). a Staining % had a area under ROC curve of 70 % (95 % CI 59–80 %) to diagnose between adenoma and normal samples with highest diagnostic ability in 100 % staining (with Sensitivity = 0.84 and Specificity = 0.60). b Staining % had a area under ROC curve of 67 % (95 % CI 59–80 %) to diagnose between CRC and normal samples with highest diagnostic ability in 100 % staining (with Sensitivity = 0.78 and Specificity = 0.60)
Fig. 3MACC1 transcripts in normal, hyperplastic (HPP) and tubular adenoma (TA) patients’ plasma. a MACC1 transcripts were detected in all measured normal (n = 45), HPP (n = 15) and TA (n = 33) patients’ plasma. MACC1 transcript levels were higher in all adenoma patients’ plasma (median 0.6036 MACC1 mRNA expression/percent calibrator) vs. normal patients’ plasma (median 0.4315 MACC1 mRNA expression/percent calibrator; p = 0.014). MACC1 transcript levels were also higher in TA patients plasma (median 0.6045 MACC1 mRNA expression/percent calibrator) vs. normal patients’ plasma (p = 0.011). However, MACC1 transcript levels were not significantly higher in HPP patients plasma (median 0.5788 MACC1 mRNA expression/percent calibrator) vs. normal patients’ plasma (p = 0.239). b Area under the curve was calculated for the diagnostic value of plasma MACC1 transcripts for Normal vs. HPP, Normal vs. Adenoma and for Normal vs. Adenoma/HPP combined