| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
Advances in Brief |
Oncology Unit [C. R., V. R. M., W. D. T, D. J. H.] and Department of Anatomical Pathology [W. A. R.], Flinders Cancer Centre, Flinders University and Flinders Medical Centre, Adelaide, South Australia 5042; Epidemiology Branch, Public and Environmental Health Service, South Australian Health Commission, Adelaide, South Australia 5000 [K. M.]; Urology Unit, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Adelaide, South Australia 5000 [P. D. Su.]; and Garvan Institute of Medical Research [D. I. Q., R. L. S.], and Departments of Urology [P. D. St.] and Medical Oncology [J. J. G.], St Vincents Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales 2010, Australia
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
7.0, P = 0.0001). In the subgroup of patients with preoperative serum PSA levels <10 ng/ml, CS was particularly useful in discriminating retrospectively those patients most suited for surgery (Kaplan-Meier plot; 14% PSA failures at 5 years for CS mean integrated absorbance cut point <7.0 versus 47% for CS
7.0, P = 0.0001). We conclude that measurements of CS level can assist in predicting patient outcome after surgery. Additionally, our data suggest that the combination of CS and PSA measurements may improve outcome prediction for patients with intermediate Gleason scores. | Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
We recently reported that increased levels of CS-GAG in the peritumoral stroma of clinically localized prostate cancers was predictive of PSA failure (5) . In a subsequent report, we proposed that the proteoglycan responsible for the association of CS with disease progression was versican (6) . Versican is known to antagonize cell adhesion to pericellular matrix components, which suggests that increased deposition of this proteoglycan in the stroma may contribute to the progression of prostate cancer. This study demonstrates in a large cohort (n = 157) of patients treated by radical prostatectomy for clinically localized prostate cancer that the measurement of CS levels in the peritumoral stroma can predict disease progression.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Early-Stage Prostate Cancer Patients.
The 170 men with prostate cancer had a median age of 65 years (range, 4678). Clinical staging [IUCC system (8)
] based on digital rectal examination, TRUS-guided biopsy, and bone scan was available for 132 of the patients. Fifty-six men were staged at cT1, and 80 at cT2. Additionally, serum PSA levels were routinely measured by a solid-phase, two-site immunoenzymatic assay (Tandem-E PSA, Hybritech, Inc., San Diego, CA). The median for preoperative serum PSA level in 162 men tested was 9.0 ng/ml (range, 0.279.0). All of the patients underwent retropubic radical prostatectomy. Patients receiving any form of neoadjuvant or adjuvant endocrine treatment or radiotherapy were excluded from this study. Progression of the disease was assessed by PSA failure, i.e., either a return to measurable serum PSA levels subsequent to a postsurgical level below the sensitivity threshold of the assay (usually <0.3 ng/ml) or, in cases where detectable levels persisted after surgery, a serum PSA level that continued to rise. PSA progression (i.e., PSA relapse, PSA failure) is correlated with subsequent clinical failure (9)
. Fifty-five of the 170 patients demonstrated PSA relapse. The median follow-up for this cohort of early-stage prostate cancer patients was 47 months (range, 16111).
Pathological indices for the operative specimen were available for all of the 170 patients. Indices were pT2 for 102 patients and pT3 for 68. The index for one patient was pT2N1 M0. Extracapsular extension of tumor was present in 67 patients and absent in 103. Seminal vesicle involvement was positive for tumor in 17 patients and negative in 142.
Immunohistochemical Staining of Tissue Sections for CS-GAG.
Sections (4-µm) of prostatic tissues were immunostained as described previously (10)
using monoclonal antibody 6C3 (kindly provided by Professor B. Caterson, Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom), which recognizes epitopes in native, intact CS-GAG (11
, 12)
. Antibody binding of CS was visualized by a standard streptavidin immunoperoxidase reaction using biotinylated secondary antibody (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) and DAB to yield an insoluble brown deposit. Immunostaining was accomplished in several batches. To reduce staining variation to a minimum, the immunostaining protocol was strictly adhered to, and a known positive control section was included in each run to monitor any variation in staining level. Deglycosylation of tissue sections by chondroitinase ACII (Seikagaku Corp, Tokyo) treatment was used previously as a negative control for CS staining (5)
. Other controls performed in previous studies (5)
indicated that delay in tissue collection or differences in fixation times between individual prostate specimens or between pathology laboratories, did not contribute to variations of CS epitope.
Image Analysis of Immunohistochemically Stained Tissue Sections.
The area and absorbance of DAB deposition were measured using an automated image analysis system (VideoPro 32; Leading Edge P/L, Marion, South Australia) similar to previous reports (5
, 6) . Color images were collected at a magnification of x100. Twenty contiguous fields were captured for each prostate sample, beginning adjacent to a randomly chosen cancer focus. Captured fields included both glandular and stromal tissue areas. Because of the exclusively stromal localization of CS in both malignant and nonmalignant prostates (5)
, video image measurements were confined to the stromal component, with luminal and epithelial areas including cancer cell foci manually edited from the images. The IOD of DAB deposited in the stroma for each image was determined, and the amount of specific-antibody staining was expressed as the MIOD per unit area of stromal tissue for the 20 images. The level of CS was, therefore, expressed as the MIOD of staining in arbitrary density units per pixel. Because of alterations to the calibration of the video camera system, the recorded measurements of CS staining intensity were significantly lower in this study (median MIOD = 4.87) compared with our previous report (median MIOD = 11.7; 5
). Variation in staining intensity between runs was within 10% in all of the instances, as determined by image analysis of identical areas within the control tissue sections, and no adjustments to individual values were made in this study.
Statistical Analysis.
Progression-free survival was calculated from the date of diagnosis to the date of progression or the date of last follow-up if progression-free. Survival times for the various components of the cohort were censored between October 1997 and April 1998. Two patients who died from causes other than prostate cancer were censored on the date of their death. One patient died from prostate cancer. Progression-free survival was used as the end point in Coxs univariate and multivariate analyses (SPSS package, SPSS Inc, Chicago, IL). PSA failure rate with the time after radical surgery for different patient subgroups was compared using the Kaplan-Meier product-limit method and log-rank test. Statistical significance in this study was set at P < 0.05.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Correlates of PSA Progression in Clinically Localized Prostate Cancer.
Associations between established tumor features and progression-free survival for this cohort of patients with clinically localized disease were examined using Coxs univariate model (Table 1)
. Whereas clinical stage cT2 was not associated with an increased risk of progression compared with cT1, pathological stage pT3 was significantly associated with a 2.5-fold increased risk compared with pT2. Evidence of extracapsular extension of tumor and involvement of seminal vesicles were associated with approximately 3-fold increases in the risk of progression. Patients with tumors of Gleason score 56 or Gleason score 7 were 12 times and 17 times, respectively, more likely to progress than patients with tumors of Gleason score 4 or less. Patients with tumors of Gleason score greater than 7 had a relative risk greater than 80-fold that of patients with tumors of Gleason score 4 or less. Elevated preoperative serum PSA levels were predictive of an increased risk of progression. There was a 3% increase in risk per unit increment of serum PSA concentration, and a 3-fold increase in risk when serum PSA concentrations were dichotomized using 10 ng/ml as the cut point.
|
|
Kaplan-Meier product-limit curves comparing the rate of PSA-relapse for the 157 patient cohort using MIOD = 7.0 as the cut point for CS concentration are shown in Fig. 1A
. Early-stage patients with low levels of CS (MIOD, <7.0) in the peritumoral stroma had significantly fewer PSA failures than patients with higher CS levels (33 versus 51% PSA failures at 5 years, respectively; log-rank statistic, 14.34; P = 0.0002). The overall relapse rate for the entire immunostained cohort was 33.1% (52 of 157 patients). In patients with low CS levels, the overall relapse rate was 22.5% (23 of 102), compared with 51% (28 of 55) in patients with high CS levels. The median follow-up for the subgroups was similar [low CS, 47 months (range, 29111); high CS, 49 months (range, 28108)].
|
Kaplan-Meier plots comparing the PSA relapse rate of patients according to Gleason score are shown in Fig. 2A
. Patients with tumors of Gleason score >7 had a considerably increased rate of PSA relapse compared with patients with tumors of Gleason score 24 (100 versus 4% PSA failures at 5 years, respectively). Patients with tumors of Gleason score 7 had a slightly increased rate of PSA relapse compared with patients with tumors of Gleason score 56 (44 versus 35% PSA failures at 5 years, respectively). Log-rank statistics indicated that the difference between the 4 groups was statistically significant (54 events, log-rank statistic, 52.71; df, 3; P < 0.0001).
|
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
80 ng/ml were treated by radical surgery alone between 1989 and 1995, provided tumor-positive lymph nodes were not detected. An important observation of our study was that approximately 50% of patients who had high levels of immunoreactive CS in the peritumoral stroma of the resected tumor PSA relapsed, irrespective of their preoperative serum PSA level. The current, more conservative practice of offering radical surgery only to patients with serum PSA levels <10 ng/ml (14)
results in a reduction in the overall relapse rate to
22% (18 of 82) in this study. A second important observation of our study was that the relapse rate in patients with low serum PSA levels and low CS levels in the peritumoral stroma is further reduced to 9% (5 of 55). Currently, Gleason grading is the most important biological feature of the tumor being used to predict patient outcome after surgery. Patients with tumors of Gleason score 24 almost invariably fare well after surgery, whereas those with Gleason score >7 usually have a very poor outcome (4 versus 100% relapse at 5 years in this study). Predicting outcome in individual patients with intermediate Gleason score is more difficult because approximately 33% (43 of 132) of this patient group relapse. A further significant finding of our study was that the combination of peritumoral CS level with preoperative serum PSA level is capable of separating patients with tumors of Gleason score 57 into 4 groups with differing rates of relapse. Patients with tumors of intermediate Gleason score but low peritumoral CS and serum PSA levels had a substantially lower 5-year relapse rate of 11%, compared with 72% for patients with high CS and PSA levels. An intermediate rate of relapse (4456%) was observed when either PSA or CS was elevated.
Our study has, therefore, established that the peritumoral CS level and Gleason score of the resected tumor and the preoperative serum PSA level are independent predictors for PSA failure. In so doing, it establishes the benefit of combined peritumoral CS and serum PSA measurements to predict the outcome after definitive treatment, i.e., radical surgery, in the absence of neoadjuvant or adjuvant endocrine therapy or radiotherapy. We speculate that elevated CS promotes decreased cancer cell adhesion to extracellular matrix components of the peritumoral prostatic stroma and results in a more rapid development of extraprostatic extension. We have proposed previously (6) that the risk of relapse from prostate cancer is increased in patients in association with elevated peritumoral levels of versican, a macromolecular proteoglycan that contains CS side chains and has recognized antiadhesive qualities (15 , 16) .
The findings of this study suggest that CS measurement in the peritumoral stroma of the resected tumor is an important adjunct to currently accepted indicators of disease outcome for determining the prognosis of patients with clinically localized prostate cancer. In a practical sense, however, improvements in outcome will only result from better stratification of patients for a particular treatment, combined with the adoption of new treatment strategies. Consequently, the potential for tumor progression must be estimated before aggressive local therapy or watchful waiting, and evaluation of suitable prognostic indicators for clinically localized prostate cancer must use diagnostic core biopsies. We are currently compiling all of the available preoperative TRUS biopsies for this cohort to determine whether the measurement of peritumoral CS is sufficiently robust to enable prediction of PSA failure before radical surgery.
In conclusion, these studies have confirmed that an increased CS level in the peritumoral stroma of the resected tumor is associated with PSA failure in patients treated by radical surgery alone for clinically localized prostate cancer. We conclude that the measurement of CS level can assist in predicting patient outcome after surgery, especially when combined with other biological features such as preoperative serum PSA measurement and Gleason score. Furthermore, we propose that similar measurements from diagnostic core biopsies could lead to a reduction in the incidence of radical prostatectomy in men who will not benefit from this procedure because of the existence of extracapsular extension or micrometastases.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
1 Supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, the Australian Kidney Foundation, the Anti-Cancer Foundation of South Australia, Flinders Medical Centre Foundation, St Vincents Clinic Foundation, Leo and Jenny Leukemia and Cancer Foundation, and Merck, Sharp and Dohme Foundation. ![]()
2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Oncology Unit, Flinders Cancer Centre, Flinders University and Flinders Medical Centre, Adelaide, S.A. 5042, Australia. Fax: 618-8204-5899; E-mail: david.horsfall{at}flinders.edu.au ![]()
3 The abbreviations used are: PSA, prostate-specific antigen; CS, chondroitin sulfate; TRUS, transrectal ultrasound; GAG, glycosaminoglycan; DAB, diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride; IOD, integrated absorbance; MIOD, mean IOD; df, degree(s) of freedom. ![]()
Received 12/22/98. Accepted 3/30/99.
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
A. J. Sakko, M. S. Butler, S. Byers, B. J. Reinboth, J. Stahl, J. G. Kench, L. G. Horvath, R. L. Sutherland, P. D. Stricker, S. M. Henshall, et al. Immunohistochemical Level of Unsulfated Chondroitin Disaccharides in the Cancer Stroma Is an Independent Predictor of Prostate Cancer Relapse Cancer Epidemiol. Biomarkers Prev., September 1, 2008; 17(9): 2488 - 2497. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
K. N. Sugahara, T. Hirata, T. Tanaka, S. Ogino, M. Takeda, H. Terasawa, I. Shimada, J.-i. Tamura, G. B. ten Dam, T. H. van Kuppevelt, et al. Chondroitin Sulfate E Fragments Enhance CD44 Cleavage and CD44-Dependent Motility in Tumor Cells Cancer Res., September 1, 2008; 68(17): 7191 - 7199. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
C. Ricciardelli, D. L. Russell, M. P. Ween, K. Mayne, S. Suwiwat, S. Byers, V. R. Marshall, W. D. Tilley, and D. J. Horsfall Formation of Hyaluronan- and Versican-rich Pericellular Matrix by Prostate Cancer Cells Promotes Cell Motility J. Biol. Chem., April 6, 2007; 282(14): 10814 - 10825. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. Suwiwat, C. Ricciardelli, R. Tammi, M. Tammi, P. Auvinen, V.-M. Kosma, R. G. LeBaron, W. A. Raymond, W. D. Tilley, and D. J. Horsfall Expression of Extracellular Matrix Components Versican, Chondroitin Sulfate, Tenascin, and Hyaluronan, and Their Association with Disease Outcome in Node-Negative Breast Cancer Clin. Cancer Res., April 1, 2004; 10(7): 2491 - 2498. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. J. Sakko, C. Ricciardelli, K. Mayne, S. Suwiwat, R. G. LeBaron, V. R. Marshall, W. D. Tilley, and D. J. Horsfall Modulation of Prostate Cancer Cell Attachment to Matrix by Versican Cancer Res., August 15, 2003; 63(16): 4786 - 4791. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
C. Ricciardelli, J. H. Brooks, S. Suwiwat, A. J. Sakko, K. Mayne, W. A. Raymond, R. Seshadri, R. G. LeBaron, and D. J. Horsfall Regulation of Stromal Versican Expression by Breast Cancer Cells and Importance to Relapse-free Survival in Patients with Node-negative Primary Breast Cancer Clin. Cancer Res., April 1, 2002; 8(4): 1054 - 1060. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. J. Sakko, C. Ricciardelli, K. Mayne, W. D. Tilley, R. G. LeBaron, and D. J. Horsfall Versican Accumulation in Human Prostatic Fibroblast Cultures Is Enhanced by Prostate Cancer Cell-derived Transforming Growth Factor {beta}1 Cancer Res., February 1, 2000; 61(3): 926 - 930. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| Cancer Research | Clinical Cancer Research |
| Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention | Molecular Cancer Therapeutics |
| Molecular Cancer Research | Cancer Prevention Research |
| Cancer Prevention Journals Portal | Cancer Reviews Online |
| Annual Meeting Education Book | Meeting Abstracts Online |