Publication: Expression of cyclooxygenase-2 has no impact on survival in adenocarcinoma of the esophagogastric junction but is associated with favourable clinicopathologic features
Authors
Knie, Juliana ; Reddemann, Katharina ; Petrova, Ekaterina ; Herhahn, Tobias ; Wellner, Ulrich ; Thorns, Christoph
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Publisher
Universidad de Murcia. Departamento de Biología Celular e Histología
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DOI
DOI: 10.14670/HH-11-843
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info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
Background. COX-2 expression induces
carcinogenesis and is thought to be an adverse
prognostic factor in gastric carcinomas while the
prognostic value of DNA mismatch repair (MMR) is still
controversial. Concerning adenocarcinomas of the
esophagogastric junction, no comprehensive data
regarding either factors are available as of yet.
Objective. We assessed expression of COX-2,
MLH1 and MSH2 in adenocarcinoma of the
esophagogastric junction in relation to patients’ survival
and various clinicopathologic features.
Design. Immunohistochemical studies (using
antibodies against COX-2, MLH1 and MSH2) were
performed in a study population of 228 tumours. Followup data was available for all patients with a mean
follow-up time of 42.8 months.
Results. 78 (34.2%) tumours were COX-2 negative,
148 (64.9%) showed COX-2 positivity. Assessment of
COX-2 expression and clinicopathologic features
revealed an inverse correlation with depth of tumour
invasion and number of metastatic lymph nodes
(p=0,021 and p=0,004, respectively). No correlation
with other features could be demonstrated. 62 cases
(27.2%) showed loss of DNA repair enzymes MLH1
and/or MSH2. MMR differed significantly between
COX-2 positive and negative cases (p=0,028). KaplanMeier survival analyses revealed no impact on patients’
survival for COX-2 expression or MMR status (p=0.837
and p=0.972, respectively).
Conclusions. Expression of COX-2 in adenocarcinomas of the esophagogastric junction seems to
have no prognostic effect or impact on patients’ survival
but is associated with favourable clinico-pathologic
factors. MMR deficiency was more frequent in COX-2
negative tumours, but MMR status had no impact on
survival and patients’ outcome whatsoever
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Citation
Histology and Histopathology, Vol.32, nº7, (2017)
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