4.6 Article

beta-catenin mutations are associated with a subset of low-stage hepatocellular carcinoma negative for hepatitis B virus and with favorable prognosis

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
Volume 157, Issue 3, Pages 763-770

Publisher

AMER SOC INVESTIGATIVE PATHOLOGY, INC
DOI: 10.1016/S0002-9440(10)64590-7

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To better understand the role of beta-catenin mutation in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), me correlated the gene mutation with hepatitis virus B (HBV) and hepatitis virus C (HCV) status and the clinicopathological features in 366 patients with resected primary unifocal HCC. beta-Catenin mutations mere also analyzed in 55 patients with multifocal HCC (68 tumors). Of the whole series, 57 (13.1%) of 434 tumors examined had beta-catenin mutations, 34 occurred at the serine/threonine residues of the GSK-3 beta region of beta-catenin, Outside the GSK-3 beta phosphorylation site, codons 32 and 34 were two mutational hot spots (17 tumors). The non-HBV-related HCC that was predominantly HCV related had a higher frequency of mutation (P < 0.00001) and more frequent mutations at codon 45 than HBV-related HCC, HBV-related HCC had a younger mean age (P < 0.00001), and higher male-to-female ratio (P < 0.003) and positive familial history of HCC (P < 0.014), Among 366 unifocal HCCs selected for clinicopathological analysis, beta-catenin mutations mere associated with grade I (P = 0.005) and stage I and II HCC (P < 0.0001), and a better 5-year survival rate (P = 0.00003), These findings suggest mechanisms for beta-catenin. mutations differ between HBV-related and non-HBV-related HCCs, and that beta-catenin mutation is a favorable prognostic factor related to low stage. beta-Catenin mutation was associated with nuclear expression of the protein (P < 0.00001), but me failed to detect point or large fragment deletion mutation in. 39 HCCs with nuclear beta-catenin expression, presumably mild-type protein. HCCs expressing mutant nuclear beta-catenin. had a better 5-year survival rate (P < 0.007), suggesting that mutant and wild-type nuclear beta-catenin proteins are not functionally equivalent and deserve more studies for further clarification.

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