Apoptosis-related (survivin, Bcl-2), tumor suppressor gene (p53), proliferation (Ki-67), and non-receptor tyrosine kinase (Src) markers expression and correlation with clinicopathologic variables in 60 thymic neoplasms

60 例胸腺肿瘤中凋亡相关 (survivin、Bcl-2)、肿瘤抑制基因 (p53)、增殖 (Ki-67) 和非受体酪氨酸激酶 (Src) 标志物的表达及其与临床病理变量的相关性

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作者:Thaer Khoury, Ayesha Arshad, Paul Bogner, Nithya Ramnath, Shaozeng Zhang, Rameela Chandrasekhar, Gregory Wilding, Sadir Alrawi, Dongfeng Tan

Background

Our

Conclusions

Regardless of WHO type and/or tumor stage, although p53 expression may predict recurrence in thymomas, p53 and Src coexpression can predict shorter OS, and cytoplasmic localization of survivin may predict recurrence in thymic carcinoma. These findings make thymic tumors a prime target for newly developed anti-Src and anti-survivin therapies.

Methods

A series of 60 thymic neoplasms was reviewed and classified according to the World Health Organization (WHO) scheme. Key clinical information, including Masaoka stage, recurrence-free survival (RFS), and overall survival (OS) was obtained. The percentage and staining intensity of listed markers were recorded. The correlation of markers and clinicopathologic variables was statistically analyzed using the Fisher exact test and log-rank test.

Results

There were 7 type A, 15 type AB, 8 type B1, 5 type B2, 17 type B3 thymomas, and 8 thymic carcinomas. Seven patients (11.7%) died of the disease. Tumors recurred in eight patients (13.3%). Although p53 expression alone was found to be correlated with RFS with borderline significance (p = 0.056), patients with Src-positive and p53-positive coexpression had a shorter OS time than the other groups (p < 0.008). Cytoplasmic expression of survivin was present in 5 of 60 thymic neoplasms (8.3%), 4 of which were thymic carcinomas that all recurred. Conclusions: Regardless of WHO type and/or tumor stage, although p53 expression may predict recurrence in thymomas, p53 and Src coexpression can predict shorter OS, and cytoplasmic localization of survivin may predict recurrence in thymic carcinoma. These findings make thymic tumors a prime target for newly developed anti-Src and anti-survivin therapies.

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