Authors' Affiliations: Department of Urologic Surgery and Vanderbilt Prostate Cancer Center; Division of Genetic Medicine, Department of Medicine; Departments of Cancer Biology and Medicine; and Division of Cancer Biostatistics, Department of Biostatistics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee.
Authors' Affiliations: Department of Urologic Surgery and Vanderbilt Prostate Cancer Center; Division of Genetic Medicine, Department of Medicine; Departments of Cancer Biology and Medicine; and Division of Cancer Biostatistics, Department of Biostatistics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TennesseeAuthors' Affiliations: Department of Urologic Surgery and Vanderbilt Prostate Cancer Center; Division of Genetic Medicine, Department of Medicine; Departments of Cancer Biology and Medicine; and Division of Cancer Biostatistics, Department of Biostatistics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee
Cancer Res. 2014 May 15;74(10):2763-72. doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-13-2543. Epub 2014 Mar 31.
In many patients with prostate cancer, the cancer will be recurrent and eventually progress to lethal metastatic disease after primary treatment, such as surgery or radiation therapy. Therefore, it would be beneficial to better predict which patients with early-stage prostate cancer would progress or recur after primary definitive treatment. In addition, many studies indicate that activation of NF-κB signaling correlates with prostate cancer progression; however, the precise underlying mechanism is not fully understood. Our studies show that activation of NF-κB signaling via deletion of one allele of its inhibitor, IκBα, did not induce prostatic tumorigenesis in our mouse model. However, activation of NF-κB signaling did increase the rate of tumor progression in the Hi-Myc mouse prostate cancer model when compared with Hi-Myc alone. Using the nonmalignant NF-κB-activated androgen-depleted mouse prostate, a NF-κB-activated recurrence predictor 21 (NARP21) gene signature was generated. The NARP21 signature successfully predicted disease-specific survival and distant metastases-free survival in patients with prostate cancer. This transgenic mouse model-derived gene signature provides a useful and unique molecular profile for human prostate cancer prognosis, which could be used on a prostatic biopsy to predict indolent versus aggressive behavior of the cancer after surgery.
在许多前列腺癌患者中,癌症在初次治疗(如手术或放疗)后会复发,并最终发展为致命的转移性疾病。因此,更好地预测哪些早期前列腺癌患者在初次确定性治疗后会进展或复发将是有益的。此外,许多研究表明,NF-κB 信号的激活与前列腺癌的进展相关;然而,其确切的潜在机制尚未完全了解。我们的研究表明,通过删除其抑制剂 IκBα 的一个等位基因来激活 NF-κB 信号,不会在我们的小鼠模型中诱导前列腺肿瘤发生。然而,与单独使用 Hi-Myc 相比,激活 NF-κB 信号确实会增加 Hi-Myc 小鼠前列腺癌模型中肿瘤进展的速度。利用非恶性 NF-κB 激活的去势雄激素小鼠前列腺,生成了 NF-κB 激活的复发性预测因子 21(NARP21)基因特征。NARP21 特征成功预测了前列腺癌患者的疾病特异性生存和远处无转移生存。这种源自转基因小鼠模型的基因特征为人类前列腺癌的预后提供了有用且独特的分子图谱,可用于前列腺活检,以预测癌症在手术后的惰性与侵袭性行为。