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Increased expression of putative cancer stem cell markers in primary prostate cancer is associated with progression of bone metastases.

Authors :
Colombel M
Eaton CL
Hamdy F
Ricci E
van der Pluijm G
Cecchini M
Mege-Lechevallier F
Clezardin P
Thalmann G
Source :
The Prostate [Prostate] 2012 May 15; Vol. 72 (7), pp. 713-20. Date of Electronic Publication: 2011 Aug 31.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Background: A number of putative stem cell markers have been associated with aggressiveness of prostate cancer, including alpha 2 and alpha 6 integrin and c-met. The study aimed to test the hypothesis that the development of bone metastasis correlates with the proportion of prostate cancer stem cell-like cells present in the primary tumor.<br />Methods: Prostate tissue samples were obtained from patients with high-risk prostatic adenocarcinoma. Prostate cancer tumor tissue samples underwent immunohistochemical staining for alpha 2 and alpha 6 integrin and c-met; positive and negative controls were included. Samples were scored as positive if >5% of cells within the sample stained positively. Survival and bone metastasis-free survival curves on the patient cohort were estimated by the actuarial method of Kaplan-Meier.<br />Results: A total of 62 patients were included in the study. Bone metastases progression rate was 46% at 105 months with a median time of 46 months (95% CI: 1-62.5 months); prostate cancer-specific survival was 33% at 122 months with a median survival time of 69.4 months (95% CI: 63.5-109.4 months). Survival curves show that c-met-, alpha 2, and alpha 6 integrin-positive tumors were positively associated with the occurrence of bone metastasis-free survival. There was a higher level of significance when at least c-met and either alpha 2 or alpha 6 integrin was positive.<br />Conclusion: It can be concluded that percentage of stem cell-like prostate cancer cells has a prognostic impact especially on the risk of metastatic bone progression.<br /> (Copyright © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1097-0045
Volume :
72
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Prostate
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
21882211
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/pros.21473