High Serum Elafin Prediction of Poor Prognosis of Locoregional Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma.
I-Chen WuYao-Kuang WangYi-Hsun ChenChun-Chieh WuMeng-Chieh WuWei-Chung ChenWen-Lun WangHung-Shun LinChou-Cheng ChenShah-Hwa ChouYu-Peng LiuMing-Tsang WuPublished in: Cancers (2021)
Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) is a highly aggressive tumor known to have locally advanced and metastatic features which cause a dismal prognosis. We sought to determine whether elafin, a non-invasive and secretory small-molecule marker, could be used to predict prognosis in locoregional ESCC patients in human and in vitro studies. In our human study, 119 subjects were identified as having incident and pathologically-proved ESCC with stage I-IIIA tumors from southern Taiwan between 2000 and 2016. We measured their serum elafin levels at baseline and followed them until the date of cancer death or until January 2020, the end of this study. Those with high serum elafin levels were found to have a 1.99-fold risk (95% confidence interval: 1.17-3.38) shorter survival than those who did not. In our in vitro experiments, elevated elafin levels were found to drive ESCC cell proliferation, migration and invasion, while attenuation of elafin level by shRNA abrogated those effects. We concluded that elafin promotes ESCC motility and invasion and leads to a worse clinical prognosis in ESCC patients without distant metastasis.
Keyphrases
- poor prognosis
- end stage renal disease
- small molecule
- cell proliferation
- newly diagnosed
- endothelial cells
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- squamous cell carcinoma
- peritoneal dialysis
- long non coding rna
- cardiovascular disease
- small cell lung cancer
- lymph node
- escherichia coli
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- cystic fibrosis
- open label