Detection of loss of heterozygosityat microsatellite loci in esophageal squamous-cell carcinoma.

Oncology

Department of Surgery I, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, Yonago, Japan.

Published: March 1999

Microsatellite alterations at 3 genetic loci (chromosomes 2p, 3p and 17p) were analyzed in 25 tumors (20 primary tumors and 5 metastatic lymph nodes) from 20 patients after surgical treatment for esophageal cancer. DNA samples from tumors were compared with control DNA from lymphocytes obtained from the peripheral blood of the individual patients. Microsatellite alterations [microsatellite instability (MSI) and loss of heterozygosity (LOH)] were detected in 15% of 20 primary tumors with marker D2S123 (chromosome 2p), 55% with marker D3S1067 (chromosome 3p) and 50% with marker TP53 (chromosome 17p). The 3-year disease-free survival rate of the 10 patients who had tumors without alterations or with an alteration at only 1 of 3 microsatellite loci was 75% and it was better than that of the 10 patients who had tumors with alterations at 2 or 3 microsatellite loci (48%, p = 0.049). This finding suggests that esophageal cancer with alterations at multiple microsatellite loci might have strong malignant potential. However, MSI was only detected in one of 20 patients, which suggests that MSI might not play an important role in the development of this cancer. Three of 5 metastatic lymph nodes showed no LOH even though primary tumors of these patients exhibited LOH with 1 or 2 markers, and 1 metastatic lymph node had LOH that was detected with D3S1067 even though the primary tumor of this patient had no LOH with all markers. Thus, clonal heterogeneity might exist in esophageal squamous-cell carcinomas.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000011959DOI Listing

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