Sutoh I, Kohno H, Nakashima Y, Hishikawa Y, Tabara H, Tachibana M, Kubota H, Nagasue N
Second Department of Surgery, Shimane Medical University, Izumo City, Japan.
Dis Colon Rectum. 2000 Feb;43(2):221-32. doi: 10.1007/BF02236987.
Because the status of the inherent drug-resistance of colorectal cancers remains obscure, human colorectal cancers with no neoadjuvant therapy were retrospectively investigated regarding the expression of three drug-resistant proteins: metallothionein, glutathione S-transferase-pi, and P-glycoprotein.
Paraffin-embedded tissues of 130 colorectal cancers (Dukes A, 20; B, 49; C, 41; D, 20) obtained by surgical resections from 1982 to 1989 were used. The three proteins were immunostained by the streptavidin-biotin complex method. The immunostaining was judged to be positive if more than 5 percent of cells showed positive staining by use of cell analysis system. The data were compared with clinicopathologic features (Dukes A-D) and patients' prognosis (Dukes AC).
Metallothionein, glutathione S-transferase-pi, and P-glycoprotein were positively expressed in 91 (70 percent), 30 (23 percent), and 98 (75 percent), respectively. A total of 120 (86 percent) expressed at least one drug-resistant protein. No intergroup differences were observed between positive and negative expressions of the proteins and their clinicopathologic features except tumor location. Rectal cancers positively expressed P-glycoprotein and three proteins more frequently. Twenty-six (20 percent), 65 (50 percent), and 21 (16 percent) cancers positively expressed one, two, and three proteins, respectively. The disease-free survival rates of patients with Dukes A through C cancer with positive staining for one, two, and three proteins were 100, 94, and 83 percent (at 1 year); 100, 72, and 51 percent (at 3 years); and 94, 66, and 38 percent (at 5 years), respectively (Kaplan-Meier with log-rank test; P = 0.016). In the multivariate Cox analysis, age, Dukes stage, tumor size, and glutathione S-transferase-pi were independent prognostic factors.
The patients with concurrent expression of drug-resistant proteins in their cancers had worse prognoses. Examining drug-resistant proteins in colorectal cancers may be useful in selecting adjuvant chemotherapy and in predicting prognosis more accurately.