| Literature DB >> 27732945 |
Olga Vornicova1, Ilanit Boyango2, Sari Feld2, Inna Naroditsky3, Olga Kazarin1, Yaniv Zohar3, Yariv Tiram2, Neta Ilan2, Ofer Ben-Izhak3, Israel Vlodavsky2, Gil Bar-Sela1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Heparanase expression is induced in many types of cancers, including melanoma, and promotes tumor growth, angiogenesis and metastasis. However, there is insufficient data regarding heparanase expression in the metastatic lesions that are the prime target for anti-cancer therapeutics. To that end, we examined heparanase expression in metastatic melanoma and its correlation with clinical parameters.Entities:
Keywords: heparanase; heparanase 2; melanoma; metastasis; survival
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27732945 PMCID: PMC5342694 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.12492
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Heparanase staining in metastatic melanoma
| Site of metastases | No of patients (%) | Negative or weak (0/+1) | Strong (+2) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skin | 14 (20) | 5 (36) | 9 (64) |
| Brain | 21 (30) | 12 (57) | 9 (43) |
| Lung | 9 (13) | 7 (78) | 2 (22) |
| Lymph nodes | 15 (22) | 9 (53) | 7 (47) |
| Other | 10 (14) | 5 (50) | 5 (50) |
| Total | 69 | 37 | 32 |
Patients characteristics
| Number of patients | 69 |
|---|---|
| Sex (male\female) | 43/26 |
| Multiple vs single metastatic site | 45/24 |
| Patients with brain metastasis | 25 |
| Elevated LDH at diagnosis | 22 |
| Stage IVa+b | 23 |
| Stage IVc | 46 |
Figure 1Heparanase expression in metastatic melanoma
A. Melanoma metastases were subjected to immunostaining applying anti-heparanase antibody as described under ‘Materials and Methods’. Shown is representative staining of heparanase in brain, colon, and stomach melanoma metastases. Heparanase immunostaining in non-malignant nevi is also included as a reference for non-malignant lesion. Note nuclear localization of heparanase in non-malignant skin tissue, compared with diffused cytoplasmic distribution in melanoma metastases. Representative lung metastases exhibiting strong (+2), weak (+1) or no staining (0) of heparanase are shown in (B). Immunostaining of heparanase in non-matched primary melanomas exhibiting strong (+2), weak (+1) or no (0) staining is shown in (C). Original magnifications: x100.
Figure 2Patients' survival
Overall survival analysis (OS; Kaplan-Meier) of stage IVa+b (n=23) vs. stage IVc (n=46) is shown in (A) (p=0.008). OS of stage IVc patients exhibiting weak (0/+1; n=26) vs. strong (+2; n=20) staining intensity of heparanase is shown in (B) (p=0.025). Note decreased survival rates of patients exhibiting strong staining of heparanase.
Clinical characteristics of stage IVc melanoma patients (46)
| Male\female | 29 | 17 | |
| Stage at presentation | IV | 13 | |
| III | 9 | ||
| I-II | 15 | ||
| NA | 9 | ||
| Performance status (PS) at presentation | 0 | 14 | |
| 1 | 14 | ||
| 2 | 7 | ||
| 3-4 | 9 | ||
| NA | 2 | ||
| Number of metastatic sites at presentation | 1 | 12 (8 brain mets) | |
| 2 | 16 | ||
| 3 | 18 | ||
| LDH at presentation | Normal | 16 | |
| 2*ULN | 14 | ||
| 3*ULN and higher | 10 | ||
| NA | 6 | ||
| Heparanase intensity | Negative (0) | Weak (+1) | Strong (+2) |
| Number of patients | 7 | 21 | 18 |
Hpa2 staining in metastatic melanoma
| Site of metastasis | No of patients (%) | Negative or weak (0/+1) | Strong (+2) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skin | 6 (13) | 3 (50) | 3 (50) |
| Brain | 18 (38) | 17 (94) | 1 (6) |
| Lung | 7 (15) | 6 (86) | 1 (14) |
| Lymph nodes | 9 (19) | 6 (67) | 3 (33) |
| Other | 7 (15) | 2 (29) | 5 (71) |
| Total | 47 (100) | 34 (72) | 13 (28) |
Figure 3Hpa2 immunostaining
Melanoma metastases were subjected to immunostaining applying anti-Hpa2 polyclonal antibody. Shown are representative photomicrographs of tumors that exhibit no (0, upper panel), weak (+1, middle panels) or strong (+2, lower panels) staining of Hpa2. Original magnification x100.