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SOX2 expression identifies Ewing sarcoma patients with high risk for tumor relapse and poor survival

Authors :
Laura Romero-Pérez
Thomas G. P. Grunewald
Susanne Jabar
Javier Alonso
Aruna Marchetto
Shunya Ohmura
Maximilian M. L. Knott
Gary Hardiman
Tilman L. B. Hoelting
Heribert Jürgens
Merve M. Kiran
Giuseppina Sannino
Wolfgang Hartmann
Thomas Kirchner
Jing Li
Stefanie Stein
Ana Sastre
Julia S. Gerke
Fabienne S. Wehweck
Julian Musa
Florencia Cidre-Aranaz
Rebeca Alba-Rubio
Uta Dirksen
Andreas Ranft
Willian Da Silveira
Martin F. Orth
Constanze Zacherl
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

Purpose: Up to 30-40% of Ewing sarcoma (EwS) patients with non-metastatic disease develop local or metastatic relapse within a time range of 2-10 years. This is in part caused by the absence of prognostic biomarkers that can identify high-risk patients to assign them to risk-adapted monitoring and treatment regimens. Since cancer stemness has been associated with tumor relapse and poor outcome, we investigated in the current study the prognostic potential SOX2 (sex determining region Y box 2) - a major transcription factor involved in development and stemness - previously described to contribute to the undifferentiated phenotype of EwS. Methods: Two independent patient cohorts, one consisting of 189 retrospectively collected EwS tumors with corresponding mRNA expression data (test cohort) and the other of 141 prospectively collected formalin-fixed and paraffin embedded resected tumors (validation cohort), were employed to analyze SOX2 expression levels by DNA microarrays or immunohistochemistry, respectively, and to compare them with clinical parameters and patient outcome. Two methods were employed to test the validity of the results at both mRNA and protein levels. Results: Both cohorts showed that only a subset of EwS patients (16-20%) express high SOX2 mRNA or protein levels, which significantly correlated with poor overall survival. Multivariate analyses of our validation cohort revealed that high SOX2 expression represents a major risk factor for survival (HR=3.19; P

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8b315916ff7e6add93040fae2e68a5eb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/498253