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. 2010 Mar;1(2):283-287.
doi: 10.3892/ol_00000050. Epub 2010 Mar 1.

Methylation of the DLEC1 gene correlates with poor prognosis in Japanese lung cancer patients

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Methylation of the DLEC1 gene correlates with poor prognosis in Japanese lung cancer patients

Hidefumi Sasaki et al. Oncol Lett. 2010 Mar.

Abstract

The incidence of chromosome 3p gene alterations is one of the most frequent and earliest documented events in lung cancer. This study aimed to investigate promoter methylation in the deleted in lung and esophageal cancer 1 (DLEC1) gene, as well as the p16 and CDH1 genes in Japanese lung cancer cases. The methylation status of the promoter regions of DLEC1, p16 and CDH1 was investigated using methylation-specific PCR. The findings were compared to the clinicopathological features of lung cancer. Methylation-specific PCR showed that the DLEC1 promoter region was methylated in 65 out of 116 (56%) lung cancers. Patients with DLEC1-methylated cancer were associated with a significantly worse prognosis than those with unmethylated cancer (p=0.0368; hazard ratio=1.83). The p16 methylation status correlated with squamous histology (p=0.03) and smoking status (never smoker vs. smoker; p=0.0122). Patients with p16 ummethylated cancer harbored more EGFR mutations (p=0.0071). The CDH1 promoter region was hypermethylated in 65 out of 118 (55.1%) lung cancer cases. However, the CDH1 methylation status was not associated with the clinicopathological characteristics of the lung cancer types. p16 and CDH1 methylation status did not correlate with survival in the lung cancer patients. Thus, in our Japanese cohort, the methylation status of the DLEC1 gene was a marker of poor prognosis independent of stage.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Of the 65 DLEC1 methylated cases, 37 patients succumbed to the disease (mean survival, 62.4 months). Of the 51 unmethylated cases, 18 patients succumbed to the disease (mean survival, 51.1 months). Thus, patients with DLEC1 methylated cancer were significantly associated with poor survival (log-rank test, p=0.0407). Black ovals, unmethylated cases; white ovals, methylated cases.

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