The aminoterminal propeptide (hotPINP) of type I homotrimer, a putative malignancy-associated type I collagen variant, was purified for the first time and a method was established for its detection in pleural fluid. Samples of 58 patients, with malignant or benign disease, were studied with specific immunoassays for the two propeptides of type-I procollagen (PICP and PINP) and with HPLC-DEAE chromatography to separate the two PINP variants. HotPINP was present in 64% of both benign and malignant pleural effusion fluids, with the exception of malignant mesotheliomas, none of which showed the presence of hotPINP. Also the PICP to PINP ratios were lower than normal in both benign and malignant samples (altogether in 69% of samples), although this deviation was greater in malignancy. These two phenomena were independent of each other. As synthesis of the alpha1-homotrimer-variant of type-I collagen seems to be relatively common during the formation of pleural effusion, it may be generally related to a fibroproliferative reaction in the pleural wall.

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