Prognostic role of Ki-67 in glioblastomas excluding contribution from non-neoplastic cells.
Rikke Hedegaard DahlrotJulie A BangsøJeanette K PetersenAnn Mari RosagerMia Dahl SørensenGuido ReifenbergerSteinbjørn HansenBjarne Winther KristensenPublished in: Scientific reports (2021)
Survival of glioblastoma patients varies and prognostic markers are important in the clinical setting. With digital pathology and improved immunohistochemical multiplexing becoming a part of daily diagnostics, we investigated the prognostic value of the Ki-67 labelling index (LI) in glioblastomas more precisely than previously by excluding proliferation in non-tumor cells from the analysis. We investigated the Ki-67 LI in a well-annotated population-based glioblastoma patient cohort (178 IDH-wildtype, 3 IDH-mutated). Ki-67 was identified in full tumor sections with automated digital image analysis and the contribution from non-tumor cells was excluded using quantitative double-immunohistochemistry. For comparison of the Ki-67 LI between WHO grades (II-IV), 9 IDH-mutated diffuse astrocytomas and 9 IDH-mutated anaplastic astrocytomas were stained. Median Ki-67 LI increased with increasing WHO grade (median 2.7%, 6.4% and 27.5%). There was no difference in median Ki-67 LI between IDH-mutated and IDH-wildtype glioblastomas (p = 0.9) and Ki-67 LI was not associated with survival in glioblastomas in neither univariate (p = 0.9) nor multivariate analysis including MGMT promoter methylation status and excluding IDH-mutated glioblastomas (p = 0.2). Ki-67 may be of value in the differential diagnostic setting, but it must not be over-interpreted in the clinico-pathological context.
Keyphrases
- wild type
- low grade
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- ion batteries
- dna methylation
- high grade
- gene expression
- induced apoptosis
- lymph node
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- solid state
- cell death
- deep learning
- physical activity
- oxidative stress
- genome wide
- transcription factor
- chronic kidney disease
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- rectal cancer
- single molecule
- single cell
- clinical evaluation