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Merck
  • Clinical significance of high expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen in non-small cell lung cancer.

Clinical significance of high expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen in non-small cell lung cancer.

Medicine (2020-04-22)
Xiaolan Ye, Bai Ling, Hanrong Xu, Gongqi Li, Xinguo Zhao, Jiangyan Xu, Jun Liu, Liangeng Liu
摘要

Although proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) plays an important role in tumor proliferation and its expression level is closely related to the biological activity of tumor cells, PCNA expression in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has been seldom reported. In this study, we aimed to investigate the significance of PCNA expression in NSCLC tissues. PCNA expression in NSCLC and adjacent tissues were assessed by immunohistochemistry (IHC), western blotting, and reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction. Single factor analysis was used to study the relationship between the expression of PCNA and clinicopathological features of NSCLC. Multi-factor Cox survival analysis was used to evaluate the relationship between the expression of PCNA and overall survival of postoperative NSCLC patients. The areas under the receiver operating characteristics were calculated to evaluate the value of PCNA expression level in predicting the 3-year survival of NSCLC patients. IHC analysis showed that the positive expression rates of PCNA protein in NSCLC and adjacent tissues were 91.79% (257/280) and 25.83% (31/120), respectively. Western blotting confirmed that PCNA protein level was significantly higher in NSCLC tissues than in the adjacent tissues (P < .05). Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction showed that the positive rate of PCNA mRNA in NSCLC was 88.93% (249/280), which was significantly higher than that in adjacent tissues 29.17% (35/120) (P < .05). Both PCNA mRNA and protein levels were correlated with tumor differentiation, size, metastasis, and stage in NSCLC. Patients exhibiting higher PCNA protein expression had a significantly shorter disease-specific survival rate than the other patients. PCNA protein level and tumor pathological type, metastasis, differentiation degree, and stage were independent factors affecting the overall survival of postoperative patients. The areas under the receiver operating characteristics of PCNA mRNA for predicting the 3-year survival of NSCLC patients was 0.89 (0.79-0.98), with a sensitivity and specificity of 0.84 and 0.76, respectively. In conclusion, high PCNA protein and mRNA levels may be associated with the occurrence, development, and prognosis of NSCLC.