Literature DB >> 7521264

Neuroendocrine differentiation as a prognostic factor in non-small cell lung cancer.

J Carles1, R Rosell, A Ariza, I Pellicer, J J Sanchez, G Fernandez-Vasalo, A Abad, A Barnadas.   

Abstract

The prognostic value of clinical and pathological factors in 97 patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), were analyzed through immunohistochemical methods. The impact on response rate and survival of age, Karnofsky performance status (PS), sex, NSCLC subtype and grade, extent of disease, objective chemotherapy response, LDH values, metastatic sites involved and immunohistochemical markers of neuroendocrine differentiation (neuron specific enolase (NSE), synaptophysin (Sy 38), chromogranin (Chr A) and Leu-7) were analyzed. Median age was 61 years and seven patients were women. Histologically, 58 had squamous cell carcinoma, 28 adenocarcinoma and 11 large cell undifferentiated carcinoma. One patient had Stage II, 35 Stage IIIa, 19 Stage IIIb and 42 Stage IV. Six patients achieved complete response, 18 partial response, 34 stable disease and 39 progressive disease. NSE was negative in 54.3% of cases as was Sy 38 (77.4%), Chr A (97.8%) and Leu-7 (95.8%). We have found correlation between neuroendocrine differentiation and absence of P-Glycoprotein expression; patients included in this subset had a higher response rate but no evidence of longer survival. The univariate analysis showed that four parameters had significant adverse effect on survival: non-responders, poor PS, abnormal LDH value and absence of NSE expression. Multivariate analysis showed that the best combination of independent prognostic factors in predicting survival was: PS and NSE expression by immunohistochemical methods.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 7521264     DOI: 10.1016/0169-5002(93)90181-v

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lung Cancer        ISSN: 0169-5002            Impact factor:   5.705


  5 in total

1.  Clinical relevance of neuroendocrine differentiation in non-small cell lung cancer assessed by immunohistochemistry: a retrospective study on 405 surgically resected cases.

Authors:  William Sterlacci; Michael Fiegl; Wolfgang Hilbe; Jutta Auberger; Gregor Mikuz; Alexandar Tzankov
Journal:  Virchows Arch       Date:  2009-08-04       Impact factor: 4.064

2.  Role of Synaptophysin, Chromogranin and CD56 in adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma of the lung lacking morphological features of neuroendocrine differentiation: a retrospective large-scale study on 1170 tissue samples.

Authors:  Katharina Kriegsmann; Christiane Zgorzelski; Thomas Muley; Petros Christopoulos; Michael Thomas; Hauke Winter; Martin Eichhorn; Florian Eichhorn; Moritz von Winterfeld; Esther Herpel; Benjamin Goeppert; Albrecht Stenzinger; Felix J F Herth; Arne Warth; Mark Kriegsmann
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2021-05-01       Impact factor: 4.430

3.  Alterations in gene expression of proprotein convertases in human lung cancer have a limited number of scenarios.

Authors:  Ilya V Demidyuk; Andrey V Shubin; Eugene V Gasanov; Alexander M Kurinov; Vladimir V Demkin; Tatyana V Vinogradova; Marina V Zinovyeva; Alexander V Sass; Irina B Zborovskaya; Sergey V Kostrov
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-02-07       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Neuroendocrine differentiation in acquired resistance to epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor.

Authors:  Youjin Chang; Seon Ye Kim; Yun Jung Choi; Kwang Sup So; Jin Kyung Rho; Woo Sung Kim; Jae Cheol Lee; Jin-Haeng Chung; Chang-Min Choi
Journal:  Tuberc Respir Dis (Seoul)       Date:  2013-09-30

5.  LMO1 functions as an oncogene by regulating TTK expression and correlates with neuroendocrine differentiation of lung cancer.

Authors:  Liqin Du; Zhenze Zhao; Milind Suraokar; Spencer S Shelton; Xiuye Ma; Tzu-Hung Hsiao; John D Minna; Ignacio Wistuba; Alexander Pertsemlidis
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2018-07-03
  5 in total

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