Hsp-27 expression at diagnosis predicts poor clinical outcome in prostate cancer independent of ETS-gene rearrangement. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: This study was performed to test the hypothesis that expression of small heat shock protein Hsp-27 is, at diagnosis, a reliable predictive biomarker of clinically aggressive prostate cancer. METHODS: A panel of tissue microarrays constructed from a well-characterised cohort of 553 men with conservatively managed prostate cancer was stained immunohistochemically to detect Hsp-27 protein. Hsp-27 expression was compared with a series of pathological and clinical parameters, including outcome. RESULTS: Hsp-27 staining was indicative of higher Gleason score (P<0.001). In tissue cores having a Gleason score >7, the presence of Hsp-27 retained its power to independently predict poor clinical outcome (P<0.002). Higher levels of Hsp-27 staining were almost entirely restricted to cancers lacking ERG rearrangements (chi2 trend=31.4, P<0.001), although this distribution did not have prognostic significance. INTERPRETATION: This study has confirmed that, in prostate cancers managed conservatively over a period of more than 15 years, expression of Hsp-27 is an accurate and independent predictive biomarker of aggressive disease with poor clinical outcome (P<0.001). These findings suggest that apoptotic and cell-migration pathways modulated by Hsp-27 may contain targets susceptible to the development of biologically appropriate chemotherapeutic agents that are likely to prove effective in treating aggressive prostate cancers.

publication date

  • August 25, 2009

Research

keywords

  • Gene Rearrangement
  • HSP27 Heat-Shock Proteins
  • Prostatic Neoplasms
  • Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-ets

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC2768089

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 70349659461

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1038/sj.bjc.6605227

PubMed ID

  • 19707199

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 101

issue

  • 7