Tumor tissue hnRNP M and HSP 90α as potential predictors of disease-specific mortality in patients with early-stage cutaneous head and neck melanoma: a proteomics-based study

Košec, Andro and Novak, Ruđer and Konjevoda, Paško and Trkulja, Vladimir and Bedeković, Vladimir and Grgurević, Lovorka (2019) Tumor tissue hnRNP M and HSP 90α as potential predictors of disease-specific mortality in patients with early-stage cutaneous head and neck melanoma: a proteomics-based study. Oncotarget, 10 (62). pp. 6713-6722. ISSN 1949-2553

[img] PDF - Published Version
Download (2MB)

Abstract

Background: Breslow tumor thickness and mitotic rate are standardly used for risk stratification of patients with malignant melanoma. However, their prognostic value is relatively limited and a need for improved prognostication has been advocated. We aimed to screen the tumor tissue proteome in a search for potentially useful prognostic factors in early-stage cutaneous head and neck melanoma. ----- Methodology and findings: Proteomic profiles of archival formalin-fixed tissue samples of 31 patients (age 23-90 years) with early-stage head and neck cutaneous malignant melanoma (American Joint Committee on Cancer, AJCC, stage I/II) were determined and expression intensities were compared to those of melanocytic nevi, yielding ratios used in data analysis. Medical charts were retrospectively reviewed to determine time elapsed since diagnosis to disease-specific death or censoring. In a multivariate recursive partitioning analysis (as per AJCC guidelines), higher expression levels of heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein M (hnRNP M) [n = 18, HR = 1.94 vs. the entire cohort; HR = 5.95 (95%CI 2.43-14.5) for "high" vs. "low" (n = 13)] and of heat shock protein 90 alpha (HSP 90α) [n = 17, HR = 2.09 vs. the entire cohort; HR = 4.59 (95%CI 1.87-11.2) for "high" vs. "low" (n = 14)] were each independently strongly associated with higher mortality (accounting for clinical and standard pathohistological features). Higher Breslow thickness and mitotic rate were associated with higher mortality only when proteomic data were disregarded. ----- Conclusions and significance: Data suggest that tumor tissue expression of hnRNP M and/or of HSP 90α deserve further investigation and clinical validation as potential novel risk stratification aids in patients with stage I-II cutaneous head and neck malignant melanoma.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: Copyright: Košec et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Departments: Katedra za anatomiju i kliničku anatomiju
Katedra za farmakologiju
Katedra za otorinoloringologiju s audiologijom i fonijatrijom
Depositing User: Kristina Berketa
Status: Published
Creators:
CreatorsEmail
Košec, AndroUNSPECIFIED
Novak, RuđerUNSPECIFIED
Konjevoda, PaškoUNSPECIFIED
Trkulja, VladimirUNSPECIFIED
Bedeković, VladimirUNSPECIFIED
Grgurević, LovorkaUNSPECIFIED
Date: 19 November 2019
Date Deposited: 08 Oct 2020 07:15
Last Modified: 08 Oct 2020 07:15
Subjects: /
Related URLs:
URI: http://medlib.mef.hr/id/eprint/3685

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year