Xiaolan You1, Yuanjie Wang1, Jian Wu1, Qinghong Liu1, Dehu Chen1, Dong Tang2, Daorong Wang2. 1. 1 Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, The Hospital Affiliated to Medical School of Yangzhou University (Taizhou People's Hospital), Taizhou, Jiangsu Province, China. 2. 2 Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, Clinical Medical College of Yangzhou University, Subei People's Hospital of Jiangsu Province, Yangzhou Jiangsu Province, China.
Abstract
Several studies suggest that peripheral blood and lymph node micrometastases may be a causative factor for gastric cancer recurrence. Cytokeratin 20 shows enriched expression in intestinal epithelial cells. This study aimed to evaluate the clinical utility of monitoring cytokeratin 20 levels in peripheral blood and lymph nodes of patients with gastric cancer for detecting micrometastasis and predicting prognosis. We detected messenger RNA levels of cytokeratin 20 in gastric cancer cell lines and in the peripheral blood of 125 patients (85 patients with gastric cancer and 40 patients with benign neoplasm) by fluorescence quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction both before and after radical resection. In all, 1586 lymph node samples from 85 patients with gastric cancer were evaluated for cytokeratin 20 expression using real-time polymerase chain reaction, as well as by immunohistochemistry staining with anti-pan-keratin and anti-cytokeratin 20 antibodies. All patients underwent follow-up until cancer-related death or for more than 3 years after tumor resection. We found that elevated cytokeratin 20 expression in peripheral blood as detected by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction closely correlates with poor clinicopathological characteristics. Detecting cytokeratin 20 messenger RNA in the lymph nodes by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction enabled more accurate determination of the clinicopathological staging of gastric cancer, best treatment approach, and prognosis. Our findings show that patients with increased cytokeratin 20 messenger RNA expression in the peripheral blood or lymph nodes have a shorter time to recurrence and poorer overall survival.
Several studies suggest that peripheral blood and lymph node micrometastases may be a causative factor for gastric cancer recurrence. Cytokeratin 20 shows enriched expression in intestinal epithelial cells. This study aimed to evaluate the clinical utility of monitoring cytokeratin 20 levels in peripheral blood and lymph nodes of patients with gastric cancer for detecting micrometastasis and predicting prognosis. We detected messenger RNA levels of cytokeratin 20 in gastric cancer cell lines and in the peripheral blood of 125 patients (85 patients with gastric cancer and 40 patients with benign neoplasm) by fluorescence quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction both before and after radical resection. In all, 1586 lymph node samples from 85 patients with gastric cancer were evaluated for cytokeratin 20 expression using real-time polymerase chain reaction, as well as by immunohistochemistry staining with anti-pan-keratin and anti-cytokeratin 20 antibodies. All patients underwent follow-up until cancer-related death or for more than 3 years after tumor resection. We found that elevated cytokeratin 20 expression in peripheral blood as detected by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction closely correlates with poor clinicopathological characteristics. Detecting cytokeratin 20 messenger RNA in the lymph nodes by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction enabled more accurate determination of the clinicopathological staging of gastric cancer, best treatment approach, and prognosis. Our findings show that patients with increased cytokeratin 20 messenger RNA expression in the peripheral blood or lymph nodes have a shorter time to recurrence and poorer overall survival.
Gastric cancer (GC) is the fifth most common cancer worldwide and the third leading cause
of cancer death in both sexes.[1,2] Despite curative gastrectomy, extended lymph node dissection,[3-6] and adjuvant chemotherapy, GC can recur in both regional and distant sites in the
majority of patients, including those without lymph node metastasis based on conventional
histological hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining.[7-9] Several studies have concluded that peripheral blood and lymph node micrometastasis
might be a key causative factor for GC recurrence.[10-14]Lymph node micrometastases of 0.2 to 2.0 mm in size have been detected in lymph nodes by
immunohistochemical (IHC)-based evaluation of cytokeratin (CK) expression, a component of
the cell skeleton involved in cytomorphology.[15] More recently, fluorescence quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction
(qRT-PCR) technology (which is a sensitive, specific, and rapid method) has been widely used
to detect the presence of circulating cancer cells in the peripheral blood and lymph nodes.[16] However, there are few reports on the detection and clinical significance of pre- and
postoperative CK20 messenger RNA (mRNA) levels in the peripheral blood of patients with GC.
Furthermore, the clinical impact of peripheral blood and lymph node micrometastasis on GC
prognosis remains controversial.[17-19] Several studies report that peripheral blood and lymph node micrometastasis in GC is
a strong indicator of overt metastatic disease or poor prognosis.[20,21] However, others have reported no significant correlation between micrometastasis and
other clinic pathological characteristics and that the presence of micrometastasis does not
influence patient prognosis.[22-26]In the present study, we detected pre- and postoperative CK20 mRNA levels in the peripheral
blood of patients with GC using qRT-PCR. We also detected CK20 expression in lymph node
samples from 85 patients with GC using qRT-PCR as well as by IHC staining with
anti-pan-keratin and anti-CK20 antibodies and estimated the clinical and prognostic value of
these biomarkers in patients with GC.
Materials and Methods
Cell Lines and Culture Conditions
The GC lines AGS (moderately differentiated), SGC-7901 (moderately differentiated), N87
(well differentiated), BGC-823 (poorly differentiated), and MKN-45 (poorly differentiated)
were purchased from the Type Culture Collection of the Chinese Academy of Sciences
(Shanghai, China) and maintained with Roswell Park Memorial Institute medium (RPMI
HyClone, Logan, Utah) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Thermo Scientific HyClone,
Logan, Utah). All cell lines were maintained at 37°C in a humidified atmosphere containing
5% CO2.
Patients
From January 2013 to June 2013, a total of 85 patients with GC who underwent gastrectomy
at the Department of General Surgery of People’s Hospital of Taizhou City were enrolled in
this study. The inclusion criteria of the study were as follows: (1) radical gastrectomy
for the primary tumor and D2 lymphadenectomy following the Japanese Research Society for
Gastric Cancer guidelines,[27] (2) complete clinicopathological and follow-up data, (3) no prior chemotherapy or
radiotherapy before surgery, (4) no gross or microscopic residual or recurrent gastric
tumor, (5) no distant metastases prior to surgery, and (6) no other synchronous
malignancies or serious disease in other systems.The histological diagnosis and tumor–node–metastasis (TNM) staging were based on the
seventh edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) TNM staging system.[28] The study protocol was approved by the Medical Ethics Committee of Taizhou People’s
Hospital of Jiangsu Province, the Hospital Affiliated to Medical of Yangzhou University
(TZRY-EC-13-0167), and all patients provided written informed consent.Patient clinicopathologic parameters were collected, including gender, age, tumor
location, tumor diameter, histological grade, Borrmann type, invasive depth, lymph node
status, peripheral blood concentrations of cancer-related antigens (ie, carcino-embryonic
antigen(CEA), carbohydrate antigen(CA)724, and CA199), and tumor emboli in the
microvessels. A total of 40 patients with benign neoplasm were used as negative
controls.
Specimens
Before and after surgical resection, a 10 mL sample of peripheral blood was obtained from
each patient through a catheter inserted into a peripheral vessel and collected into EDTA
tubes. The blood samples were anticoagulated with heparin (5 U/mL), stored at 4°C, and
processed within 4 hours after blood collection.Half of each resected lymph node was fixed in 10% formalin and embedded in paraffin for
routine histopathological and IHC examination. The other half was stored in a clean tube
at −80°C for RNA extraction.
Total RNA Isolation and Complementary DNA Synthesis
Mononuclear cells were isolated from 5 mL heparinized whole blood by density gradient
centrifugation using a lymphocyte separating medium (Huajing Corp, Shanghai, China).
Mononuclear cells and GC cell lines were washed 3 times with phosphate-buffered saline,
then centrifuged at 2000 rpm for 5 minutes. Total RNA was then extracted from cell lysates
using TRIzol reagent (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, Maryland), according to the
manufacturer’s instructions. For the lymph node samples, 50 to 100 mg of tissues were
homogenized in 1 mL of TRIzol reagent using a power homogenizer prior to RNA extraction.
The concentration and purity of RNA was determined using a NanoDrop spectrophotometer
(Thermo Scientific, Wilmington, Delaware): A260 to A280 ratios in the range of 1.8 to 2.0
were considered pure. First-strand complementary DNA (cDNA) was synthesized using the
SuperScript First-Strand cDNA Synthesis Kit (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, California), according
to the manufacturer’s instructions, and then stored at −20°C for subsequent qPCR
experiments.
Fluorescence qRT-PCR
The mRNA expression levels of CK20 were detected by qRT-PCR using the ABI 7700 sequence
detector (Perkin Elmer/Applied Biosystems, Foster City, California). β-Actin was used as
an internal control to normalize mRNA levels. The primers targeting CK20 and β-actin were
as follows: CK20 upstream primer: 5′-CAGACACACGGTGAACTATGG-3′ and downstream primer:
5′-GATCAGCTTCCACTGTTAGACG-3′; β-actin upstream primer: 5′-CACGAAACTACCTTCAACTCC-3′ and
downstream primer: 5′-CATACTCCTGCTTGCTGATC-3′. All primers were synthesized by Life
Technologies (Shanghai, China).The amplification reaction mixture consisted of 4 μL cDNA, 25 μL 10× buffer, 1 μL dNTP,
0.4 μL Taq DNA polymerase, 1 μL each of sense and antisense primers (including CK20 and
β-actin), and distilled H2O to a final volume of 50 μL. The amplification
reaction mixture was amplified through 40 cycles. The amplification reaction mixture was
first heated at 95°C for 5 minutes to terminate the reverse transcription reaction, and
thermal cycling was carried out at 95°C for 30 seconds, 62°C for 30 seconds, and 72°C for
30 seconds, followed by final extension at 72°C for 10 minutes. The sample was then slowly
cooled to 4°C. All reactions were run in triplicate. The same procedure was performed with
the standard agent and a positive or negative control. The relative levels of normalized
gene expression were calculated with the equation 2−ΔΔCT, in which ΔCT = CT
gene − CT control. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) statistics were employed to
estimate the cut points to distinguish between high and low expression of CK20 in
peripheral blood and lymph nodes from GC samples. The cutoff values for CK20 were
determined in the blood samples of healthy donors and GC tissue using the maximal
χ2 method.
Immunohistochemistry
The IHC was performed as described previously,[29] using anti-CK20 monoclonal antibody (Abcam, Cambridge, United Kingdom) and primary
pan-CK antibody A45-B/B3 detecting CK8, CK18, and CK19 (AS Diagnostik, Hückeswagen,
Germany). Negative controls were treated identically, though the primary antibodies were
omitted, and positive controls were provided by the kit supplier. The results were
assessed by 2 independent pathologists without knowledge of the patient clinical status.
Positive staining was defined as moderate or strong brown or dark brown staining in cells.
No visible staining or light brown staining in cells was defined as negative; detection of
at least 0.2 mm foci combined with amplification H&E staining to confirm the
configuration of cells was regarded as a positive case.
Follow-Up
After curative resection, all patients were followed regularly every 3 months during the
first 2 years and every 6 months during the third to fifth years. The final follow-up date
was June 30, 2016. No patients were lost to follow-up. The median follow-up duration was
39.2 months (range: 36-43 months) after surgery. A total of 36 (42.4%) cases were
metastasis or recurrence, of which 29 (34.1%) had tumor-related deaths.
Statistical Analysis
Statistical analyses were performed with SPSS 16.0 for Windows (SPSS, Chicago, Illinois).
The correlations between CK20 mRNA expression and clinicopathological features were
analyzed using the χ2 test and the correlation of the 3 methods (H&E
staining, IHC, and qRT-PCR) was calculated. Univariate analysis was performed to identify
variables associated with prognosis. Cox regression analysis was used to identify
independent predictors of prognosis in patients with GC. The survival rate curves were
compared using the log-rank test. P values <.05 were considered
statistically significant.
Results
Cytokeratin 20 mRNA Expressed in GC Cell Lines
The CK20 mRNA was found to be expressed in GC cell lines, and there was no significant
difference in CK20 expression among the 5 cell lines examined (t = 1.734,
P = .181; Figure
1). Cell line SGC-7901 with the lowest expression of CK20 was selected for
subsequent in vitro experiments. To validate the sensitivity of the
qRT-PCR, different counts of SGC-7901 cells (105, 104,
103, 102, 101, and 1) were added to a suspension
containing 108 peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMNs), and corresponding
mRNA levels of CK20 were evaluated. We found the sensitivity for CK20 detection to be
10−7 in this in vitro model of gastric micrometastases.
Figure 1.
CK20 mRNA is expressed in multiple GC cell lines. There was no significant difference
in CK20 expression among the 5 cell lines examined (t = 1.734,
P = .181). CK20 indicates cytokeratin 20; mRNA, messenger RNA.
CK20 mRNA is expressed in multiple GC cell lines. There was no significant difference
in CK20 expression among the 5 cell lines examined (t = 1.734,
P = .181). CK20 indicates cytokeratin 20; mRNA, messenger RNA.
Patients and Characteristics
A total of 85 patients with GC were included in our study. There were 26 females (30.6%)
and 59 males (69.4%), and the median age was 65.0 years (range: 35-80 years). All patients
were histologically confirmed to have adenocarcinoma following pathological assessment of
resected tumors. Participant characteristics and baseline measures are shown in Table 1. A total of 40 patients
with benign tumors were used as negative controls, including 4 cases of gastric stromal
tumor, 11 cases of thyroid adenoma, 7 cases of nodular goiter, 10 cases of benign breast
tumor, and 8 cases of uterine fibroids.
Table 1.
Correlations Between Preoperative CK20 mRNA Expression in Peripheral Blood and
Clinicopathological Features of 85 Patients With Gastric Cancer.
Correlations Between Preoperative CK20 mRNA Expression in Peripheral Blood and
Clinicopathological Features of 85 Patients With Gastric Cancer.Abbreviations: CA, carbohydrate antigen; CEA, carcino-embryonic antigen; CK20,
cytokeratin 20; mRNA, messenger RNA.
Correlation Between Preoperative CK20 mRNA Levels and Clinicopathological
Factors
In the blood samples of healthy donors, the median CK20 mRNA level was 0.43 (range:
0.27-2.15) and the median CK20 level in GC tissues was 0.93 (range: 0.23-4.17). The ROC
statistics were used to estimate the cutoff scores to distinguish positive and negative
CK20 expression. Scores ≥0.83 were considered to indicate positive expression (Figure 2). Based on these results,
none of the negative controls showed positive CK20 expression preoperatively, while 35 of
85 patients with primary GC showed positive CK20 expression (positive ratio: 41.2%). A
significant difference between the 2 groups was found (χ2 = 22.876,
P = 1.72 × 10−6). The associations between the pre-CK20 mRNA
levels and the clinicopathological characteristics are shown in Table 1.
Figure 2.
The ROC statistics were used to estimate the cutoff scores to distinguish between
positive and negative CK20 mRNA expression. CK20 indicates cytokeratin 20; mRNA,
messenger RNA; ROC, receiver operating characteristic.
The ROC statistics were used to estimate the cutoff scores to distinguish between
positive and negative CK20 mRNA expression. CK20 indicates cytokeratin 20; mRNA,
messenger RNA; ROC, receiver operating characteristic.Preoperative expression levels of CK20 in peripheral blood from patients with GC
correlated with tumor diameter (P = 1.661 × 10−5), invasive
depth (P = 1.901 × 10−5), differentiation grade
(P = .015), Borrmann type (P = 1.079 ×
10−6), lymphatic metastasis (P = 1.968 × 10−14),
tumor emboli in the microvessels (P = 1.338 × 10−7), and
concentration of cancer-related antigens in peripheral blood, including CEA
(P = 3.683 × 10−8), CA724 (P = 5.234 ×
10−8), and CA199 (P = 3.908 × 10−7). However,
expression of CK20 in peripheral blood did not correlate with the demographic
characteristics or tumor location (P > .05).
Correlation Between Postoperative CK20 mRNA Levels and Clinicopathological
Factors
On the first day after resection, CK20 levels as detected by qPCR were still negative
among the 40 patients with benign tumors. In contrast, 49 cases (57.6%) in the patient
with GC group showed positive CK20 expression. There was a significant difference between
the malignant and benign tumor groups (χ2 = 37.926, P = 7.34 ×
10−10). The associations between the post-CK20 mRNA levels and the
clinicopathological characteristics are shown in Table 2.
Table 2.
Correlations Between Postoperative CK20 mRNA Expression in Peripheral Blood and
Clinicopathological Features of 85 Patients With Gastric Cancer.
Correlations Between Postoperative CK20 mRNA Expression in Peripheral Blood and
Clinicopathological Features of 85 Patients With Gastric Cancer.Abbreviations: CA, carbohydrate antigen; CEA, carcino-embryonic antigen; CK20,
cytokeratin 20; mRNA, messenger RNA.Positive CK20 expression in peripheral blood postoperatively was closely related to tumor
diameter (P = 8.271 × 10−9), Borrmann type (P
= 1.559 × 10−4), invasive depth (P = 1.212 × 10−8),
lymphatic metastasis (P = 1.739 × 10−10), microvessel invasion
(P = 5.600 × 10−11), and cancer-related antigens, including
CEA (P = 3.064 × 10−5), CA724 (P = 7.852 ×
10−6), and CA199 (P = 2.805 × 10−6). Similar to
findings for preoperative CK20 expression, there was no association between CK20 and
demographic factors and tumor location (P > .05). Additionally, there
was no association between CK20 and the degree of differentiation (P =
.062).
Cytokeratin 20 mRNA Levels in Postoperative Peripheral Blood Compared With
Preoperative Levels
Among the 85 patients with GC, 35 (41.2%) showed positive CK20 expression in preoperative
peripheral blood, while 49 (57.6%) had increased CK20 expression in postoperative
peripheral blood. There was a significant increase in CK20 expression in postoperative
peripheral blood compared with preoperative levels (χ2 = 4.612,
P = .032).We analyzed the clinicopathological features of patients with positive CK20 mRNA
expression in postoperative blood alone compared to 50 patients with negative preoperative
expression of CK20 mRNA. We found that expression of CK20 mRNA in postoperative blood
alone was related to age (P = .012), tumor diameter (P =
.001), invasive depth (P = .031), lymph node status (P =
.016), and tumor emboli in the microvessels (P = 3.339 ×
10−5). The associations between postoperative positive CK20 mRNA expression in
peripheral blood alone and clinicopathological characteristics are shown in Table 3.
Table 3.
Correlations Between Postoperative Positive CK20 mRNA Expression in Blood Alone and
Clinicopathological Features of 50 Patients With Preoperative Negative CK20 mRNA
Expression.
Correlations Between Postoperative Positive CK20 mRNA Expression in Blood Alone and
Clinicopathological Features of 50 Patients With Preoperative Negative CK20 mRNA
Expression.Abbreviations: CA, carbohydrate antigen; CEA, carcino-embryonic antigen; CK20,
cytokeratin 20; mRNA, messenger RNA.
Correlation Between Peripheral Blood CK20 mRNA Levels and Patient Survival
All patients underwent follow-up until cancer-related death or more than 3 years after
tumor resection. The median follow-up interval was 39.2 months. The overall survival (OS)
time was 39.20 ± 0.87 months (95% confidence interval [CI]: 37.51-40.90) for preoperative
CK20-negative patients and 31.62 ± 1.84 months (95% CI: 28.01-35.23) for preoperative
CK20-positive patients. The disease-free survival (DFS) time was 37.72 ± 1.19 months (95%
CI: 35.38-40.05) for preoperative CK20-negative patients and 25.99 ± 2.01 months (95% CI:
22.06-29.03) for preoperative CK20-positive patients. The OS and DFS time for preoperative
CK20-positive patients was significantly poorer than that of CK20-negative patients
(χ2 = 24.13, P < .01; χ2 = 25.68,
P < .01; respectively). Correlation between preoperative CK20 mRNA
levels and patient survival are shown in Figure 3.
Figure 3.
Correlation between preoperative CK20 mRNA expression and patient survival. A, The
overall survival rate of patients based on preoperative CK20-negative and
CK20-positive expression in peripheral blood (P < .01). B, The
disease-free survival rate of patients based on preoperative CK20-negative and
CK20-positive expression in peripheral blood (P < .01). CK20
indicates cytokeratin 20; mRNA, messenger RNA.
Correlation between preoperative CK20 mRNA expression and patient survival. A, The
overall survival rate of patients based on preoperative CK20-negative and
CK20-positive expression in peripheral blood (P < .01). B, The
disease-free survival rate of patients based on preoperative CK20-negative and
CK20-positive expression in peripheral blood (P < .01). CK20
indicates cytokeratin 20; mRNA, messenger RNA.The OS time was 39.52 ± 0.93 months (95% CI, 37.69-41.35) for postoperative CK20-negative
patients and 33.73 ± 1.50 months (95% CI: 30.77-36.69) for postoperative CK20-positive
patients. The DFS time was 38.41 ± 1.26 months (95% CI: 35.94-40.87) for postoperative
CK20-negative patients and 29.01 ± 1.76 months (95% CI, 25.57-32.46) for postoperative
CK20-positive patients. The OS and DFS time for postoperative CK20-positive patients was
significantly poorer than that of CK20-negative patients (χ2 = 13.613,
P < .01; χ2 = 11.065, P < .01;
respectively). Correlation between postoperative CK20 mRNA levels and patient survival is
shown in Figure 4.
Figure 4.
Correlation between postoperative CK20 mRNA expression and patient survival. A, The
overall survival rate of patients based on postoperative CK20-negative and
CK20-positive expression in peripheral blood (P < .01). B, The
disease-free survival rate of patients based on postoperative CK20-negative and
CK20-positive expression in peripheral blood (P < .01). CK20
indicates cytokeratin 20; mRNA, messenger RNA.
Correlation between postoperative CK20 mRNA expression and patient survival. A, The
overall survival rate of patients based on postoperative CK20-negative and
CK20-positive expression in peripheral blood (P < .01). B, The
disease-free survival rate of patients based on postoperative CK20-negative and
CK20-positive expression in peripheral blood (P < .01). CK20
indicates cytokeratin 20; mRNA, messenger RNA.
Detection of CK20 Expression in Lymph Nodes by IHC and qRT-PCR
A total of 1568 lymph nodes were removed from 85 patients with GC, with a median of 18.5
(range: 7-90) lymph nodes per patient. By H&E staining, 414 lymph nodes and 42
patients were positive for metastasis, with a median of 4.8 (range: 1-89) lymph nodes per
patient. Lymph nodes positive for metastasis by H&E staining were all positive via
pan-CK IHC. For specimens detected by CK20-IHC, 44 (10.6%) lymph nodes positive for
metastasis by H&E staining showed negative CK expression. All lymph nodes that were
negative for metastasis by H&E staining were further evaluated for CK staining using
pan-CK IHC. Among these, an additional 28 (2.43%) lymph nodes representing 16 patients
showed positive pan-CK expression by IHC. When evaluated by qRT-PCR, an additional 137
(11.87%) lymph nodes representing 34 patients showed positive CK20 mRNA expression. All
IHC-positive lymph nodes were confirmed as positive by qRT-PCR. The sensitivity of qRT-PCR
was significantly higher than H&E staining and IHC in GC lymph nodes (χ2 =
31.87, P < .01), and there was a statistically significant difference
between CK20 detection by RT-PCR compared with pan-CK detection by IHC in lymph nodes
negative for metastasis by H&E staining (χ2 = 9.18, P =
.002).Based on the expression of CK20 mRNA, we identified 137 lymph nodes and 34 patients with
micrometastases. This resulted in a change in clinicopathological staging in 22 cases.
Correlation between the postoperative CK20 mRNA expression in lymph nodes and
clinicopathological factors was closely related to the degree of differentiation
(P = 3.19 × 10−4), invasive depth (P =
4.188 × 10−5), microvessel invasion (P = 1.673 ×
10−4), the tumor diameter (P = .019), Borrmann type
(P = .049), tumor-related antigens including CEA (P =
.034), CA724 (P = .008), and CA199 (P = .037), as well
as preoperative (P = .024) and postoperative CK20 expression in
peripheral blood (P = .004). However, no association was observed between
postoperative CK20 mRNA expression and demographic characteristics, tumor location, or the
status of lymphatic metastasis (P > .05). The correlation between CK20
mRNA levels in lymph nodes and clinicopathological characteristics is shown in Table 4.
Table 4.
Correlations Between CK20 mRNA Expression in Lymph Nodes and Clinicopathological
Features of 85 Patients With Gastric Cancer.
Clinicopathological Feature
Negative, n (%)
Positive, n (%)
χ2 Test
P Value
51 Cases (60.0%)
34 Cases (40.0%)
Gender
1.561
.212
Male
38 (74.5)
21 (61.7)
Female
13 (25.5)
13 (38.2)
Age (years)
0.554
.457
≥60
41 (80.4)
25 (73.5)
<60
10 (19.6)
9 (26.5)
Tumor location
0.151
.985
Upper
19 (37.2)
13 (38.2)
Middle
14 (27.5)
9 (26.5)
Lower
14 (27.5)
10 (29.4)
Diffuse/multiple lesions
4 (7.8)
2 (5.9)
Tumor diameter (cm)
7.976
.019
<3
20 (39.2)
5 (14.7)
3-5
14 (27.5)
8 (23.5)
>5
17 (33.3)
21 (61.8)
Histological grade
12.952
3.19 × 10−4
Well/moderately differentiated
29 (56.9)
6 (17.6)
Poorly differentiated/undifferentiated
22 (43.1)
28 (82.4)
Borrmann type
7.787
.049
I
5 (9.8)
0 (0.0)
II
21 (41.2)
8 (23.5)
III
10 (19.6)
11 (32.4)
IV
15 (29.4)
15 (44.1)
Lymph node status (H&E staining)
4.194
.241
N0
31 (60.8)
12 (35.3)
N1
7 (13.7)
3 (8.8)
N2
5 (9.8)
7 (20.6)
N3
8 (15.7)
12 (35.3)
Invasive depth
16.784
4.188 × 10−5
T1-T2
32 (62.7)
6 (17.6)
T3-T4
19 (37.3)
28 (82.4)
CEA
4.508
.034
Normal
42 (82.4)
21 (61.8)
High
9 (17.6)
13 (38.2)
CA724
7.054
.008
Normal
42 (82.4)
19 (55.9)
High
9 (17.6)
15 (44.1)
CA199
4.359
.037
Normal
42 (82.4)
23 (67.6)
High
9 (17.6)
11 (32.4)
Tumor emboli in the microvessels
14.167
1.673 × 10−4
Negative
30 (58.8)
6 (17.6)
Positive
21 (41.2)
28 (82.4)
Pre-CK20 in peripheral blood
5.006
.024
Negative
35 (68.6)
15 (44.1)
Positive
16 (31.4)
19 (55.8)
Post-CK20 in peripheral blood
8.224
.004
Negative
28 (54.9)
8 (23.5)
Positive
23 (45.1)
26 (76.5)
Abbreviations: CA, carbohydrate antigen; CEA, carcino-embryonic antigen; CK20,
cytokeratin 20; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; mRNA, messenger RNA.
Correlations Between CK20 mRNA Expression in Lymph Nodes and Clinicopathological
Features of 85 Patients With Gastric Cancer.Abbreviations: CA, carbohydrate antigen; CEA, carcino-embryonic antigen; CK20,
cytokeratin 20; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; mRNA, messenger RNA.
Correlation Between CK20 mRNA in Lymph Nodes and Patient Survival
The OS time was 38.76 ± 1.39 months (95% CI: 36.03-41.49) for CK20 mRNA-negative lymph
node patients and 34.59 ± 1.32 months (95% CI: 31.99-37.16) for CK20 mRNA-positive lymph
node patients. The OS time for CK20 mRNA-positive lymph node patients was significantly
poorer than that of CK20 mRNA-negative lymph node patients (χ2 = 22.435,
P < .01).The DFS time was 38.41 ± 1.26 months (95% CI, 38.64-42.13) for CK20 mRNA-negative lymph
node patients and 29.01 ± 1.76 months (95% CI, 25.57-32.46) for CK20 mRNA-positive lymph
node patients. The DFS time for CK20 mRNA-positive lymph node patients was significantly
poorer than that of negative patients (χ2 = 24.042, P <
.01). Correlation between the CK20 mRNA status in lymph nodes and patient survival is
shown in Figure 5.
Figure 5.
Correlation between CK20 mRNA expression in lymph nodes and patient survival. A, The
overall survival rate of patients based on CK20-positive expression and CK20-negative
expression in lymph nodes (P < .01). B, The disease-free survival
rate of patients based on CK20-positive expression and CK20-negative expression in
lymph nodes (P < .01). CK20 indicates cytokeratin 20; mRNA,
messenger RNA.
Correlation between CK20 mRNA expression in lymph nodes and patient survival. A, The
overall survival rate of patients based on CK20-positive expression and CK20-negative
expression in lymph nodes (P < .01). B, The disease-free survival
rate of patients based on CK20-positive expression and CK20-negative expression in
lymph nodes (P < .01). CK20 indicates cytokeratin 20; mRNA,
messenger RNA.
Factors Associated With Survival of Patients With GC
On univariate analysis, tumor diameter, histological grade, Borrmann type, invasive
depth, CEA, CA724, CA199, tumor emboli in the microvessels, preoperative CK20 in
peripheral blood, postoperative CK20 in peripheral blood, and lymph node metastasis status
by H&E staining, pan-CK expression by IHC, and CK20 mRNA expression by qPCR were
significantly associated with survival (Table 5). On Cox regression analysis, histological
grade, preoperative CK20 in peripheral blood, postoperative CK20 in peripheral blood, and
lymph node status by H&E staining, pan-CK expression by IHC, and CK20 mRNA expression
by qPCR were independently associated with survival of patients with GC (Table 6).
Table 5.
Univariate Analysis Showing Variables Associated With Survival of Patients With
Gastric Cancer.
Clinicopathological Feature
Died, n (%)
Survived, n (%)
χ2 Test
P Value
29 Cases (34.1%)
56 Cases (65.9%)
Gender
0.004
.95
Male
20 (69.0)
39 (69.6)
Female
9 (31.0)
17 (30.4)
Age (years)
3.73
.06
≥60
19 (65.5)
47 (83.9)
<60
10 (34.5)
9 (16.1)
Tumor location
3.72
.29
Upper
10 (34.5)
22 (39.3)
Middle
6 (20.7)
17 (30.3)
Lower
9 (31.0)
15 (26.8)
Diffuse/multiple lesions
4 (13.8)
2 (3.6)
Tumor diameter (cm)
13.69
.001
<3
4 (13.8)
21 (37.5)
3-5
4 (13.8)
18 (32.1)
>5
21 (72.4)
17 (30.4)
Histological grade
21.35
3.81 × 10−6
Well/moderately differentiated
2 (6.9)
33 (58.9)
Poorly differentiated/undifferentiated
27 (93.1)
23 (41.1)
Borrmann type
10.34
.016
I
0 (0.0)
5 (8.9)
II
5 (17.3)
24 (42.9)
III
9 (31.0)
12 (21.4)
IV
15 (51.7)
15 (26.8)
Invasive depth
7.53
.006
T1-T2
7 (24.1)
31 (55.4)
T3-T4
22 (75.9)
25 (44.6)
CEA
8.23
.004
Normal
16 (55.2)
47 (83.9)
High
13 (44.8)
9 (16.1)
CA724
5.98
.014
Normal
16 (55.2)
45 (80.4)
High
13 (44.8)
11 (19.6)
CA199
7.79
.005
Normal
17 (58.6)
48 (85.7)
High
12 (41.4)
8 (14.3)
Tumor emboli in the microvessels
11.36
.001
Negative
5 (17.2)
31 (55.4)
Positive
24 (82.8)
25 (44.6)
Pre-CK20 in peripheral blood
17.73
2.54 × 10−5
Negative
8 (27.6)
42 (75.0)
Positive
21 (72.4)
14 (25.0)
Post-CK20 in peripheral blood
1.36
.001
Negative
5 (17.2)
31 (55.4)
Positive
24 (82.8)
25 (44.6)
Lymph node status (H&E staining)
19.58
9.63 × 10−6
Negative
5 (17.2)
38 (67.9)
Positive
24 (82.8)
18 (32.1)
Lymph node status (IHC pan-CK)
28.49
9.37 × 10−8
Negative
2 (6.9)
38 (67.9)
Positive
27 (93.1)
18 (32.1)
Lymph node status (PCR CK20)
18.89
1.38 × 10−5
Negative
2 (6.9)
31 (55.4)
Positive
27 (93.1)
25 (44.6)
Abbreviations: CA, carbohydrate antigen; CEA, carcino-embryonic antigen; CK20,
cytokeratin 20; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; IHC, immunocytochemistry; PCR,
polymerase chain reaction.
Table 6.
Cox Regression Analysis Showing Variables Independently Associated With Survival of
Patients With Gastric Cancer.
B
SE
Wald
Significance
Exp(B)
95% CI for Exp(B)
Lower
Upper
Histological grade
−1.87
0.61
9.29
0.002
0.156
0.05
0.51
Preoperative CK20 in peripheral blood
1.62
0.43
14.00
<0.001
5.04
2.16
11.77
Postoperative CK20 in peripheral blood
1.14
0.52
4.80
0.03
3.13
1.13
8.71
Lymph node status (H&E staining)
−1.52
0.64
5.58
0.02
0.22
0.06
0.77
Lymph node status (IHC pan-CK)
4.25
0.95
19.83
<0.001
70.01
10.79
454.25
Lymph node status (PCR CK-20)
1.87
0.76
6.10
0.01
6.48
1.47
28.57
Abbreviations: CA, carbohydrate antigen; CEA, carcino-embryonic antigen; CI,
confidence interval; CK20, cytokeratin 20; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; IHC,
immunocytochemistry; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; SE, standard error.
Univariate Analysis Showing Variables Associated With Survival of Patients With
Gastric Cancer.Abbreviations: CA, carbohydrate antigen; CEA, carcino-embryonic antigen; CK20,
cytokeratin 20; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; IHC, immunocytochemistry; PCR,
polymerase chain reaction.Cox Regression Analysis Showing Variables Independently Associated With Survival of
Patients With Gastric Cancer.Abbreviations: CA, carbohydrate antigen; CEA, carcino-embryonic antigen; CI,
confidence interval; CK20, cytokeratin 20; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; IHC,
immunocytochemistry; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; SE, standard error.
Discussion
Despite efforts regarding prevention, early diagnosis, and improved therapeutic strategies,
mortality rates for patients with GC with resectable tumors remain high. Invasion and
distant metastasis are the leading factors influencing the clinical outcome of patients with GC.[30] Several studies have also shown that peripheral blood and lymph node micrometastasis
prior to surgery might be key indicators for GC recurrence and distant metastasis.[17,31,32] Therefore, identifying markers to determine the potential of metastasis and disease
progression in patients with GC will help us tailor postoperative adjuvant therapies and
improve clinical outcomes. However, currently, there are no markers available that can
predict peripheral blood or lymph node metastasis or evaluate the prognosis of patients with
GC.Previous studies have shown that CK18 and CK19 mRNA could be detected in peripheral blood
using nested RT-PCR in healthy participants, but CK20 mRNA could not be detected.[33] Our results indicated that CK20 mRNA is expressed in different GC cell lines and that
detection of CK20 using RT-PCR is a relatively sensitive and specific method to distinguish
gastric cells from PBMNs. We also found that none of the patients with benign neoplasm
showed positive CK20 expression in the peripheral blood before or after surgery. The CK20
was only expressed in the peripheral blood from patients with GC. Because CK20 is
specifically found in gastrointestinal epithelium,[34,35] our results indicate that epithelial cells or epithelial carcinoma cells exist in the
peripheral blood circulation.In our study, we detected 35 (41.2%) of 85 patients with primary GC with positive CK20
expression by qRT-PCR prior to surgical resection. In contrast, we detected 49 (57.6%) of 85
patients with positive CK20 expression by qRT-PCR on the first day after the operation.
Postoperatively, there was no association between positive CK20 mRNA detection and
histological grade (P > .05). Our findings indicate that micrometastasis
in the peripheral blood is associated with surgery and that the operative procedure may be a
factor in promoting micrometastasis. We also found that OS and DFS for patients with
positive CK20 expression were significantly poorer than that of patients with negative CK20
expression (P < .01). This suggests that CK20 expression in the
peripheral blood is indicative of micrometastasis and poor prognosis in patients with
GC.Currently, micrometastases in lymph nodes are defined as tumor cell clusters of between 0.2
and 2.0 mm in size in the greatest dimension. According to the seventh TNM classification by
the International Union Against Cancer,[36] lymph node micrometastasis should be reflected in the staging of the disease. The IHC
is a widely accepted technique for detecting lymph node micrometastasis in GC using
epithelial markers such as CK.[37] Using IHC, Cai et al reported the incidence of lymph node
micrometastasis was 25% in T1b GC,[38] while Kim et al reported a 10% incidence of lymph node
micrometastasis in pT1N0 GC.[24] In our study, we found that 44 (10.6%) lymph nodes positive for micrometastasis based
on H&E staining were negative for CK20 expression based on IHC, indicating that use of
an anti-CK20 antibody to detect lymph node micrometastases may result in false negatives.
However, all lymph nodes positive for micrometastasis based on H&E staining were also
positive for pan-CK expression based on IHC, and the incidence of lymph node micrometastasis
based on pan-CK IHC was 2.43% (28/1154) among the lymph nodes that were called as negative
by H&E staining.When micrometastasis is detected by RT-PCR, CK is usually employed as a target marker.[39,40] The RT-PCR was previously shown to increase the detection rate of micrometastasis to
a level higher than that achieved by IHC.[40] According to the report by Arigami et al, RT-PCR identified lymph
node micrometastasis in 31.3% of patients, whereas IHC detected lymph node micrometastasis
in 11.3% of patients.[41] Similarly, we found the sensitivity of qRT-PCR was significantly higher than IHC
(P < .01).According to the seventh edition of the AJCC staging system,[28] if the number of macrometastatic nodes is less than 15, detection of only one
micrometastasis could change the N stage. From our study in which the expression of CK20
mRNA was detected in lymph nodes, we identified 137 lymph nodes in 34 patients with
micrometastases. Our findings changed the clinicopathological staging in 22 cases, and we
found that micrometastasis in lymph nodes is significantly related to indicators of poor
prognosis.
Conclusions
This study showed that CK20 mRNA expression in the lymph nodes is indicative of lymph node
micrometastasis. Until now, the clinical impact of lymph node micrometastasis on GC
prognosis was controversial. Our results indicate that expression of CK20 mRNA in lymph
nodes was significantly associated with reduced OS and DFS. Therefore, detecting CK20 mRNA
expression in the peripheral blood and lymph nodes might help to diagnose micrometastasis in
the circulation and thus identify patients with GC with poor prognosis. Indeed,
micrometastasis is thought to be a key etiology of recurrence and distant metastasis after
resection of primary gastric tumors. We suggest the status of micrometastases in the
peripheral blood in patients with early or advanced GC should be investigated at an early
stage, so their treatment plan can be adjusted accordingly. In addition, the detection of
micrometastases in the lymph nodes can allow more accurate clinicopathological staging of GC
to guide treatment and improve prognosis.
Authors: Jacques Ferlay; Isabelle Soerjomataram; Rajesh Dikshit; Sultan Eser; Colin Mathers; Marise Rebelo; Donald Maxwell Parkin; David Forman; Freddie Bray Journal: Int J Cancer Date: 2014-10-09 Impact factor: 7.396
Authors: N Hayashi; I Ito; A Yanagisawa; Y Kato; S Nakamori; S Imaoka; H Watanabe; M Ogawa; Y Nakamura Journal: Lancet Date: 1995-05-20 Impact factor: 79.321
Authors: T Arigami; S Natsugoe; Y Uenosono; H Arima; Y Mataki; K Ehi; S Yanagida; S Ishigami; S Hokita; T Aikou Journal: Br J Cancer Date: 2005-09-19 Impact factor: 7.640