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. 2012 Oct;80(4):749-53.
doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2012.07.001. Epub 2012 Aug 28.

Differences in frequency of ERG oncoprotein expression between index tumors of Caucasian and African American patients with prostate cancer

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Differences in frequency of ERG oncoprotein expression between index tumors of Caucasian and African American patients with prostate cancer

Philip Rosen et al. Urology. 2012 Oct.

Abstract

Objective: To systematically evaluate the ETS-related gene (ERG) alterations in the multifocal tumor context using whole-mount prostatectomy specimens from African and Caucasian American patients matched for age, pathologic grade and stage. Oncogenic activation of the ERG is the most common early genomic alteration in patients with prostate cancer (CaP) in Western countries. However, ERG alterations have not been systematically examined in African American patients with a known greater risk of CaP incidence and mortality.

Methods: ERG oncoprotein expression was analyzed in 91 Caucasian and 91 African American patients with CaP, who were matched for age, Gleason score, and pathologic stage. A unique aspect of the present study was the evaluation of ERG in whole-mount prostatectomy sections, minimizing sampling bias and allowing the careful assessment of the ERG in the multifocal tumor context of CaP.

Results: The frequency of ERG-positive prostate tumors was significantly greater among Caucasian Americans than among African Americans when assessed in all tumor foci (41.9% vs 23.9%, P < .0001). A markedly greater frequency of ERG oncoprotein expression was noted between the index tumors of the Caucasian Americans (63.3%) and those of the African Americans (28.6%). Also, in the African American patients, the higher grade index tumors were predominantly ERG negative.

Conclusion: ERG typing of CaP established a major difference between the index tumors of Caucasian and African American patients. ERG-negative index tumors might indicate a less favorable outcome for African American patients. The results of the present study underscore that typing of CaP for the ERG could enhance our understanding of the biologic differences between the examined ethnic groups.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Representative images of whole-mount sections analyzed by ERG immunohistochemistry and by FISH in a CA and AA patient. A, on the left, an ERG positive index tumor and an ERG negative secondary tumor of a CA patient is outlined and representative view fields are enlarged. B, right panel represents an ERG negative index tumor and a secondary ERG positive tumor in an AA patient. C, ERG rearrangement by translocation in a CA patient and D, ERG rearrangement by deletion in a section from an AA are shown by FISH assay.

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