1. Genetic and epigenetic changes in primary metastatic and nonmetastatic colorectal cancer.
- Author
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Miranda, E., Destro, A., Malesci, A., Balladore, E., Bianchi, P., Baryshnikova, E., Franchi, G., Morenghi, E., Laghi, L., Gennari, L., and Roncalli, M.
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COLON cancer ,METHYLATION ,GENETICS ,PROGNOSIS ,PHENOTYPES ,GENETIC mutation ,LYMPH nodes ,LIVER metastasis - Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) develops as multistep process, which involves genetic and epigenetic alterations. K-Ras, p53 and B-Raf mutations and RASSF1A, E-Cadherin and p16INK4A promoter methylation were investigated in 202 CRCs with and without lymph node and/or liver metastasis, to assess whether gene abnormalities are related to a metastogenic phenotype. K-Ras, B-Raf and p53 mutations were detected in 27, 3 and 32% of the cases, with K-Ras mutations significantly associated with metastatic tumour (P=0.019). RASSF1A, E-Cadherin and p16INK4A methylation was documented in 20, 44 and 33% of the cases with p16INK4A significantly associated with metastatic tumours (P=0.001). Overall, out of 202 tumours, 34 (17%) did not show any molecular change, 125 (62%) had one or two and 43 (21%) three or more. Primary but yet metastatic CRCs were prevalent in the latter group (P=0.023) where the most frequent combination was one genetic (K-Ras in particular) and two epigenetic alterations. In conclusion, this analysis provided to detect some molecular differences between primary metastatic and nonmetastatic CRCs, with K-Ras and p16INK4A statistically altered in metastatic tumours; particular gene combinations, such as coincidental K-Ras mutation with two methylated genes are associated to a metastogenic phenotype.British Journal of Cancer (2006) 95, 1101–1107. doi:10.1038/sj.bjc.6603337 www.bjcancer.com Published online 12 September 2006 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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