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Clinical Cancer Research Vol. 5, 2464-2469, September 1999
© 1999 American Association for Cancer Research


Molecular Oncology, Markers, Clinical Correlates

Prognostic Significance of Fas and Fas Ligand Expressions in Human Esophageal Cancer

Muneaki Shibakita1, Mitsuo Tachibana, Dipok K. Dhar, Tsukasa Kotoh, Shoichi Kinugasa, Hirofumi Kubota, Reiko Masunaga and Naofumi Nagasue

Second Department of Surgery, Shimane Medical University, Izumo 693-8501, Shimane, Japan

Esophageal carcinomas have recently been shown to express Fas ligand (FasL) and down-regulate Fas to escape from host immune surveillance. However, the prognostic importance of Fas/FasL and their correlation with clinicopathological characteristics are yet to be delineated in this highly malignant carcinoma. Specimens from 106 esophageal squamous cell carcinoma patients were used for immunohistochemical evaluation of Fas, FasL, and CD8 expressions. Fifty-two (49%) and 34 (32%) patients were positive for FasL and Fas, respectively. There were no associations between FasL expression and clinicopathological characteristics except lymph vessel invasion. Strong FasL expression correlated with significant (P = 0.0011) decrease in tumor nest CD8+ cells. However, neither FasL nor CD8+ had any impact on patient survival. Strong Fas expression was correlated with depth of invasion (40.3% in pT1,T2 versus 20.5% in pT3,T4; P = 0.0308), histological differentiation (45.7% in well versus 25.4% in nonwell; P = 0.0347), and lymph node metastasis (22.6% in positive versus 45.5% in negative; P = 0.0129). Fas expression was one of the independent favorable prognosticators for patients’ survival (risk ratio, 3.26; P = 0.0103) in esophageal SCC. Fas expression was an independent prognosticator for recurrence-free survival, whereas FasL expression did not influence the survival in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Down-regulation of tumor Fas may be the hallmark of immune privilege for the tumor, thus causing the patients’ poorer outcome. Tumor FasL may counterattack the host immune cells to such an extent that the prognosis is not affected.




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Molecular Cancer Research Cancer Prevention Research
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Copyright © 1999 by the American Association for Cancer Research.