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Clinical implications of proliferation activity in T1 or T2 male gastric cancer patients
Authors:Young-Woo Kim  Bang Wool Eom  Myeong-Cherl Kook  Han-Seong Kim  Mi-Kyung Kim  Hai-Li Hwang  Vishal Chandra  Shiv Poojan  Yura Song  Jae-Soo Koh  Chang-Dae Bae  Jungsil Ro  Kyeong-Man Hong
Affiliation:1.Research Institute, National Cancer Center, Goyang, Korea;2.National Cancer Center Hospital, National Cancer Center, Goyang, Korea;3.Department of Pathology, Inje University Ilsan Paik Hospital, Goyang, Korea;4.Department of Pathology, Korea Cancer Center Hospital, Seoul, Korea;5.Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, and Samsung Biomedical Research Institute, Suwon, Korea
Abstract:Proliferation activity has already been established as a prognostic marker or as a marker for anticancer drug sensitivity. In gastric cancer, however, the prognostic significance of proliferation activity is still being debated. Several studies evaluating proliferation activity using Ki-67 have shown controversial results in terms of the relationship between proliferation activity and overall survival (OS) or drug sensitivity in gastric cancer patients. Because cytoskeleton-associated protein 2 (CKAP2) staining has recently been introduced as a marker of proliferation activity, we analyzed 437 gastric cancer tissues through CKAP2 immunohistochemistry, and we evaluated the chromatin CKAP2-positive cell count (CPCC) for proliferation activity. Although the CPCC did not show any significant correlation with OS in the male, female or total number of cases, it did show a significant correlation in the T1 or T2 male patient subgroup, according to log-rank tests (P=0.001) and univariate analysis (P=0.045). Additionally, multivariate analysis with the Cox proportional hazard regression model showed a significant correlation between the CPCC and OS (P=0.039) for the co-variables of age, gender, T stage, N stage, histology, tumor location, tumor size and adjuvant chemotherapy. In male gastric cancer cell lines, faster-growing cancer cells showed higher sensitivity to cisplatin than slow-growing cells. Thus our study indicates that CPCC-measured proliferation activity demonstrates a significantly worse prognosis in T1 or T2 male gastric cancer patients. The CPCC will help to more precisely classify gastric cancer patients and to select excellent candidates for adjuvant chemotherapy, which in turn will facilitate further clinical chemotherapeutic trials.
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