Background & Aims: Small liver nodules similar to 2 cm are difficult to characterize by radiologic or pathologic examination. Our aim was to identify a molecular signature to diagnose early hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Methods: The transcriptional profiles of 55 candidate genes were assessed by quantitative real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in 17 dysplastic nodules (diameter, 10 mm) and 20 early HCC (diameter, IS mm) from HCV cirrhotic patients undergoing resection/transplantation and 10 nontumoral cirrhotic tissues and 10 normal liver tissues. Candidate genes were confirmed by quantitative RT-PCR in 20 advanced HCCs and by immunohistochemistry in 75 samples and validated in an independent set of 29 samples (dysplastic nodules [10] and small HCC [19; diameter, 20 mm]). Results: Twelve genes were significantly, differentially expressed in early HCCs compared with dysplastic nodules (> 2-fold change; area under the receiver operating characteristic curve >= 0.8): this included TERT, GPC3, gankyrin, survivin, TOP2A, LYVE1, E-cadherin, IGFBP3, PDGFRA, TGFA, cyclin D1, and HGF. Logistic regression analysis identified a 3-gene set including GPC3 (18-fold increase in HCC, P=.01), LYVE1 (12-fold decrease in HCC, P=.0001), and survivin (2.2-fold increase in HCC, P=.02), which had a discriminative accuracy of 94%. The validity of the gene signature was confirmed in a prospective testing set. GPC3 immunostaining was positive in all HCCs and negative in dysplastic nodules (22/22 vs 0/14, respectively, P <.001). Nuclear staining for survivin was positive in 12 of 13 advanced HCC cases and in 1 of 9 early tumors. Conclusions: Molecular data based on gene transcriptional profiles of a 3-gene set allow a reliable diagnosis of early HCC. Immunostaining of GPC3 confirms the diagnosis of HCC.

A molecular signature to discriminate dysplastic nodules from early hepatocellular carcinoma in HCV cirrhosis / J.M. Llovet, Y. Chen, E. Wurmbach, S. Roayaie, M.I. Fiel, M. Schwartz, S.N. Thung, G. Khitrov, W. Zhang, A. Villanueva, C. Battiston, V. Mazzaferro, J. Bruix, S. Waxman, S.L. Friedman. - In: GASTROENTEROLOGY. - ISSN 0016-5085. - 131:6(2006), pp. 1758-1767.

A molecular signature to discriminate dysplastic nodules from early hepatocellular carcinoma in HCV cirrhosis

V. Mazzaferro;
2006

Abstract

Background & Aims: Small liver nodules similar to 2 cm are difficult to characterize by radiologic or pathologic examination. Our aim was to identify a molecular signature to diagnose early hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Methods: The transcriptional profiles of 55 candidate genes were assessed by quantitative real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) in 17 dysplastic nodules (diameter, 10 mm) and 20 early HCC (diameter, IS mm) from HCV cirrhotic patients undergoing resection/transplantation and 10 nontumoral cirrhotic tissues and 10 normal liver tissues. Candidate genes were confirmed by quantitative RT-PCR in 20 advanced HCCs and by immunohistochemistry in 75 samples and validated in an independent set of 29 samples (dysplastic nodules [10] and small HCC [19; diameter, 20 mm]). Results: Twelve genes were significantly, differentially expressed in early HCCs compared with dysplastic nodules (> 2-fold change; area under the receiver operating characteristic curve >= 0.8): this included TERT, GPC3, gankyrin, survivin, TOP2A, LYVE1, E-cadherin, IGFBP3, PDGFRA, TGFA, cyclin D1, and HGF. Logistic regression analysis identified a 3-gene set including GPC3 (18-fold increase in HCC, P=.01), LYVE1 (12-fold decrease in HCC, P=.0001), and survivin (2.2-fold increase in HCC, P=.02), which had a discriminative accuracy of 94%. The validity of the gene signature was confirmed in a prospective testing set. GPC3 immunostaining was positive in all HCCs and negative in dysplastic nodules (22/22 vs 0/14, respectively, P <.001). Nuclear staining for survivin was positive in 12 of 13 advanced HCC cases and in 1 of 9 early tumors. Conclusions: Molecular data based on gene transcriptional profiles of a 3-gene set allow a reliable diagnosis of early HCC. Immunostaining of GPC3 confirms the diagnosis of HCC.
time RT-PCR; liver-transplantation; tumor-marker; expression; glypican-3; identification; hepatocardinogenesis; management; survival; serum
Settore MED/18 - Chirurgia Generale
2006
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/465563
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