Telomerase activity in pituitary adenomas: significance of telomerase expression in predicting pituitary adenoma recurrence
- PMID: 12825819
- DOI: 10.1023/a:1023935621976
Telomerase activity in pituitary adenomas: significance of telomerase expression in predicting pituitary adenoma recurrence
Abstract
Clinical and histopathological evaluations are inadequate for assessing biological aggressiveness and regrowth potential in benign pituitary adenomas. To develop reliable and prognostically informative means of predicting behavior remains an intractable problem. Telomerase, a reverse transcriptase that extends telomere length, may facilitate tumorigenesis and tumor immortality. In the present study, we investigated the telomerase activity of pituitary adenomas, and attempted to assess the value of telomerase expression for predicting their clinical course. In total, 31 (30 patients) benign pituitary adenoma samples including 8 recurrent adenomas were studied. Telomerase expression was evaluated by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based telomeric repeat amplification protocol (TRAP) assay and telomerase activity levels were quantitated by improved PCR enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The data were analyzed in relation to clinical course which was reviewed at 4-5.5 years (median follow-up time, 52.5 months) after surgery. The relative values of the telomerase expression for predicting the clinical course were compared with the MIB-1 antigen-based proliferative cell index (PCI) and p53 immunoreactivity which have recently been suggested to correlate with aggressive behavior in pituitary adenomas. Overall, telomerase expression was detected in 13% of the adenomas (4 tumor tissues, 3 patients). These adenomas comprised large, invasive, and functioning adenomas. The number of telomerase-positive adenomas was small; however, the PCI was higher in cases with telomerase expression (4 tumor tissues; mean, 4.2 +/- 2.4%) than in those without it (27 tumor tissues; 1.4 +/- 1.3%) (p = 0.01). One tumor with detectable telomerase expression, which did not undergo additional pharmacological or radiotherapeutic intervention after first surgery, recurred rapidly despite gross total surgical resection, although the PCI of both the primary and recurrent adenomas was not high. Detection of telomerase expression may represent an additional useful means of identifying aggressive behavior, complementing the histopathological evaluation of benign-appearing pituitary adenomas.
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