Prognostic value of apoptosis in rectal cancer patients of the dutch total mesorectal excision trial: radiotherapy is redundant in intrinsically high-apoptotic tumors.

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Publication year
2006Source
Clinical Cancer Research, 12, 21, (2006), pp. 6432-6436ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Pathology
Journal title
Clinical Cancer Research
Volume
vol. 12
Issue
iss. 21
Page start
p. 6432
Page end
p. 6436
Subject
NCMLS 3: Growth and differentiation; NCMLS 6: Genetics and epigenetic pathways of disease; ONCOL 1: Hereditary cancer and cancer-related syndromes; ONCOL 2: Age-related aspects of cancer; ONCOL 3: Translational research; ONCOL 5: Aetiology, screening and detection; UMCN 1.2: Molecular diagnosis, prognosis and monitoring; NCMLS 3: Growth and differentiationAbstract
PURPOSE: The combination of radiotherapy and good quality surgery reduces local recurrence rate for rectal cancer patients. This study assesses the prognostic value of both intrinsic and radiotherapy-induced apoptosis and evaluates the relevance of radiotherapy for outcome of rectal cancer patients. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Tumor samples (1,198) were available from the Dutch Total Mesorectal Excision trial, in which rectal cancer patients were treated with standardized surgery and randomized for preoperative short-term radiotherapy or not. Tumor samples were obtained at time of surgery. Tissue microarrays were constructed and stained with the active caspase-specific M30 antibody to determine the amount of apoptotic epithelial tumor cells. RESULTS: Nonirradiated patients with a negative circumferential margin displaying lower than median levels of apoptosis developed more local recurrences (10.5% versus 6.1%; P=0.06) and more rapidly after surgery than patients with high intrinsic apoptosis in their tumors (median time to recurrence, 13.0 versus 21.3 months; P=0.04). In multivariate analysis, intrinsic apoptosis was an independent predictor for the development of local recurrences (hazard ratio, 2.0; P=0.05). Radiotherapy increased apoptosis level (11 versus 23 apoptotic cells/mm2 tumor epithelium; P<0.001), but this apoptosis did not influence patients' prognosis. CONCLUSIONS: Rectal cancer patients with low intrinsic apoptosis will benefit from radiotherapy with respect to the development of local recurrences. Because apoptosis is an inherent characteristic of tumors, patients who do not need radiotherapy may be selected based on the apoptotic index of the primary tumor.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [204994]
- Electronic publications [103247]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [81051]
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