Research Papers:
Deletion of 8p is an independent prognostic parameter in prostate cancer
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Abstract
Martina Kluth1,*, Nina Nadine Amschler1,*, Rami Galal1, Christina Möller-Koop1, Phillipp Barrow1, Maria Christina Tsourlakis1, Frank Jacobsen1, Andrea Hinsch1, Corinna Wittmer1, Stefan Steurer1, Till Krech1, Franziska Büscheck1, Till Sebastian Clauditz1, Burkhard Beyer2, Waldemar Wilczak1, Markus Graefen2, Hartwig Huland2, Sarah Minner1, Thorsten Schlomm2,3, Guido Sauter1, Ronald Simon1
1Institute of Pathology, Prostate Cancer Center at University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany
2Martini-Clinic, Prostate Cancer Center at University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany
3Department of Urology, Section for Prostate Cancer Research, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany
*These authors contributed equally to this work
Correspondence to:
Ronald Simon, email: [email protected]
Keywords: NKX3.1, TMPRSS2:ERG, PTEN, prostate cancer, tissue microarray
Received: May 30, 2016 Accepted: November 12, 2016 Published: November 17, 2016
ABSTRACT
Deletion of chromosome 8p is the second most frequent genomic alteration in prostate cancer. To better understand its clinical significance, 8p deletion was analyzed by fluorescence in-situ hybridization on a prostate cancer tissue microarray. 8p deletion was found in 2,581 of 7,017 cancers (36.8%), and was linked to unfavorable tumor phenotype. 8p deletion increased from 29.5% in 4,456 pT2 and 47.8% in 1,598 pT3a to 53.0% in 931 pT3b-pT4 cancers (P < 0,0001). Deletions of 8p were detected in 25.5% of 1,653 Gleason ≤ 3 + 3, 36.6% of 3,880 Gleason 3 + 4, 50.2% of 1,090 Gleason 4 + 3, and 51.1% of 354 Gleason ≥ 4 + 4 tumors (P < 0,0001). 8p deletions were strongly linked to biochemical recurrence (P < 0.0001) independently from established pre- and postoperative prognostic factors (P = 0.0100). However, analysis of morphologically defined subgroups revealed, that 8p deletion lacked prognostic significance in subgroups with very good (Gleason ≤ 3 + 3, 3 + 4 with ≤ 5% Gleason 4) or very poor prognosis (pT3b, Gleason ≥ 8, pN1). 8p deletions were markedly more frequent in cancers with (53.5%) than without PTEN deletions (36.4%; P < 0,0001) and were slightly more frequent in ERG-positive (40.9%) than in ERG-negative cancers (34.7%, P < 0.0001) due to the association with the ERG-associated PTEN deletion. Cancers with 8p/PTEN co-deletions had a strikingly worse prognosis than cancers with deletion of PTEN or 8p alone (P ≤ 0.0003). In summary, 8p deletion is an independent prognostic parameter in prostate cancer that may act synergistically with PTEN deletions. Even statistically independent prognostic biomarkers like 8p may have limited clinical impact in morphologically well defined high or low risk cancers.
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