AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to evaluate whether the level of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) expression can predict the tumor response in patients with locally advanced gastric cancer who received preoperative chemoradiotherapy.
  • - Out of 36 patients, 17 showed a positive tumor response to treatment, with 22% of them having positive EGFR expression, which was linked to a poorer response in the overall analysis (p = 0.015).
  • - The findings suggest that high EGFR expression may indicate a lower likelihood of tumor response to preoperative chemoradiotherapy, making it a potential molecular marker for predicting treatment outcomes in these patients.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of our study was a retrospective evaluation whether the intensity of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) expression predicts tumor response to preoperative chemoradiotherapy in patients with locally advanced gastric carcinoma.

Patients And Methods: Thirty-six patients with gastric adenocarcinoma (cT2-4 or N+) were studied. Preoperative treatment consisted of 30-45 Gy of gastric irradiation with continuous 5-fluorouracil and weekly cisplatin. Surgical resection was performed 4-6 weeks later. EGFR expression in pretreatment tumor biopsies was assessed by immunohistochemistry. Level of EGFR expression was determined from the intensity and extent of staining. Tumor response was defined as a reduction of at least one T-stage level and/or finding of intense tumor regression in histopathologic examination.

Results: Seventeen patients responded to preoperative chemoradiation -- 8 patients (22%) had pathologic complete response, 9 patients (25%) were downstaged. Positive EGFR expression was found in 8 tumors (22%), and represented a significant predictive marker of poor tumor response in multivariate logistic regression analysis (p = 0.015). Response to chemoradiotherapy was found in 60% (16/28) of EGFR negative patients and in 13% (1/8) of EGFR positive patients (p = 0.044). None of the eight EGFR positive patients achieved pathologic complete response in comparison with 8/28 (29%) of patients with EGFR negative staining (p = 0.16).

Conclusion: EGFR may represent a molecular marker predictive for poor response to preoperative chemoradiotherapy in locally advanced gastric carcinoma.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00066-008-1880-9DOI Listing

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