4.6 Article

Early-onset gastric cancers have a different molecular expression profile than conventional gastric cancers

Journal

MODERN PATHOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 4, Pages 564-572

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/modpathol.3800563

Keywords

early-onset gastric cancer; COX-2; TFF1

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Many studies examine the molecular genetics of gastric cancer, but few look at young patients in particular and there is no comparison of molecular expression between early-onset gastric cancer (<= 45 years old) and conventional gastric cancers. Expression of cycloxygenase-2 (COX-2) is elevated in gastric adenocarcinomas compared to non-neoplastic mucosa, and in light of studies showing reduced risk of gastric cancer in nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug users, we have chosen to investigate the expression of COX-2 and related molecules in 113 early-onset gastric cancers and compare it with 91 conventional gastric cancers, using tissue microarrays. These markers include molecules known to be important in conventional gastric carcinogenesis, such as E-Cadherin, p53, COX-2, Trefoil Factor-1 (TFF1), beta-catenin, p16 and c-myc; as well as molecules not yet described as being important in gastric cancer, such as the transcription factor c-jun, the COX-2 mRNA stabilizer HuR, and C/EBP-beta, a transcription factor for COX-2. All markers showed a statistically significant difference between early-onset gastric cancers and conventional gastric cancers, using a chi(2) test. In particular, early-onset gastric cancers displayed a COX-2 Low, TFF1-expressing phenotype, whereas COX-2 overexpression and loss of TFF1 was found in conventional cancers, and this difference between early-onset gastric cancers and conventional cancers remained statistically significant when adjusted for location and histology (P<0.0001 and P=0.002 respectively). We found that COX-2 overexpression correlates significantly with loss of TFF1 (P=0.001), overexpression of C/EBP-beta (P<0.001) and cytoplasmic HuR (P=0.016). COX-2 was significantly associated with p53 positivity (P=0.003). Abnormalities in E-Cadherin correlated significantly with diffuse phenotype, whereas high expression of COX-2, loss of TFF1 and overexpression of C/EBP-beta correlated with the intestinal phenotype. Our results provide further evidence that early-onset gastric cancer exhibits a distinctive expression profile that may have practical implications.

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