Clinical Cancer Research Bridging the Lab and the Clinic in Cancer Medicine Infection and Cancer: Biology, Therapeutics, and Prevention
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Clinical Cancer Research Vol. 11, 6205-6211, September 1, 2005
© 2005 American Association for Cancer Research


Imaging, Diagnosis, Prognosis

APE1 and XRCC1 Protein Expression Levels Predict Cancer-Specific Survival Following Radical Radiotherapy in Bladder Cancer

Sei C. Sak1, Patricia Harnden2, Colin F. Johnston1, Alan B. Paul3 and Anne E. Kiltie1

Authors' Affiliations: 1 Cancer Research UK Clinical Centre, 2 Pathology and 3 Urology, St. James's University Hospital, Leeds, United Kingdom

Requests for reprints: Anne E. Kiltie, Cancer Research UK Clinical Centre, St. James's University Hospital, Leeds, LS9 7TF United Kingdom. Phone: 44-113-206-4908; Fax: 44-113-242-9886; E-mail: anne.kiltie{at}cancer.org.uk.

Introduction: Radiotherapy offers the potential of bladder preservation in muscle-invasive bladder cancer, but only a proportion of tumors respond, and there are no accurate predictive methods. The ability of tumor cells to repair DNA damage induced by ionizing radiation influences radiosensitivity. We therefore investigated the prognostic value of the DNA repair proteins APE1 and XRCC1 in patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer treated by radical radiotherapy.

Materials and Methods: The tumors of 90 patients with muscle-invasive transitional cell carcinoma and known clinical outcomes were immunostained with APE1 and XRCC1 antibodies. Levels of protein expression were assessed as a percentage of tumor cells with positive nuclear staining (1,000 cells per tumor).

Results: The median percentage of nuclear staining for APE1 was 98.7% (range, 42.2-100%) and for XRCC1 was 96.5% (range, 0.6-99.6%). High expression levels of APE1 or XRCC1 (≥95% positivity) were associated with improved patient cancer-specific survival (log-rank, P = 0.02 and 0.006, respectively). In a multivariate Cox regression model, APE1 and XRCC1 expression and hydronephrosis were the only independent predictors of patient survival.

Conclusions: Expression levels of both APE1 and XRCC1 proteins were strongly associated with patient outcome following radiotherapy, separating patients with good outcome from the 50% with poor outcome (82% and 44%, 3-year cause-specific survival, respectively). If prospectively validated, this simple test could be incorporated into clinical practice to select patients likely to respond to radiotherapy and consider alternative forms of therapy for those unlikely to respond.




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C. Rodel, C. Weiss, and R. Sauer
Trimodality Treatment and Selective Organ Preservation for Bladder Cancer
J. Clin. Oncol., December 10, 2006; 24(35): 5536 - 5544.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
Molecular Cancer Research Cancer Prevention Research
Cancer Prevention Journals Portal Cancer Reviews Online
Annual Meeting Education Book Meeting Abstracts Online
Copyright © 2005 by the American Association for Cancer Research.