4.7 Article

Long-term significance of urinary neopterin in ovarian cancer: a study by the Austrian Association for Gynecologic Oncology (AGO)

Journal

ANNALS OF ONCOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 9, Pages 1740-1746

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/annonc/mdw248

Keywords

ovarian cancer; prognosis; neopterin; tumor marker; inflammation; immunity

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Interaction between cancer cells and the immune system is becoming an increasingly important issue. Neopterin can serve as a marker of the host's immunological response. Elevated neopterin levels at the time of diagnosis of ovarian cancer are associated with impaired prognosis and may indicate a detrimental effect of cancer-associated inflammatory reaction.Neopterin is produced by activated macrophages upon stimulation with interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) and thus, elevated neopterin concentrations in patients indicate cellular inate immune response. Most studies in patients with malignant diseases found an association between higher neopterin concentrations and reduced survival and impaired prognosis. Nevertheless, neopterin is not a classical tumor marker since it is not produced by the cancer cells themselves. In a study conducted by the Austrian Gynecologic Oncology Group (AGO) in 114 patients with ovarian cystadenomas and 223 patients with invasive ovarian cancer, patients' urinary neopterin was determined before and after primary therapy. The relevance of neopterin in long-term median follow-up was assessed. Elevated levels (cut-off 250 A mu mol/mol creatinine) were found less frequently in women with benign ovarian cystadenomas (24%) than in patients with malignant disease (58%). After 10 years, only 57% of ovarian cancer patients with elevated urinary neopterin levels survived without disease progression following primary therapy when compared with 86% of women with normal levels (P < 0.001). Along with residual tumor, FIGO stage, age and histological type, neopterin was significantly associated with overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS). The median PFS was 52 and 12 months and the median OS was 81 and 24 months for patients with normal and elevated neopterin, respectively, P < 0.001. In a multivariate Cox regression analysis, only residual tumor, neopterin and age were independently associated with OS, while only residual tumor was predictive for PFS. Thirty patients with early-stage invasive ovarian cancer (FIGO I and II) were analyzed separately. Of 3 patients with elevated neopterin, 2 died of disease in contrast to 2 out of 27 patients with normal neopterin (P = 0.004). In ovarian cancer, the negative impact of elevated urinary neopterin levels indicates a detrimental effect of cancer-associated inflammatory reaction.

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