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Immunohistochemical analysis of colorectal cancer with gastric phenotype: Claudin-18 is associated with poor prognosis
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Citations
41
References
2010
Year
Tumor BiologyOncologyGastric PhenotypePositive ExpressionGastrointestinal OncologyMedicineImmunologyGastroenterologyColorectal CancerPathologyPoor PrognosisGastrointestinal PathologyClaudin-18 ExpressionCancer BiologyRadiation OncologyTumor MicroenvironmentCancer Research
Claudin-18 plays a key role in constructing tight junctions, and altered claudin-18 expression has been documented in various human malignancies; however, little is known about the biological significance of claudin-18 in colorectal cancer (CRC). The aim of this study is to investigate the significance of claudin-18 expression in CRC and its association with clinicopathological factors. We performed clinicopathological analysis of claudin-18 expression in a total of 569 CRCs by immunohistochemistry. Moreover, we investigated the association between claudin-18 and various markers including gastric/intestinal phenotype (MUC5AC, MUC6, MUC2 and CD10), CDX2, claudin-3, claudin-4, p53 and Ki-67. Claudin-18 expression was detected in 21 of the 569 CRCs (4%) and was seen exclusively on the cell membrane. Positive expression of claudin-18 showed a significant correlation with positive expression of MUC5AC (P < 0.0001) and negative expression of CDX2 (P= 0.0013). The prognosis of patients with positive claudin-18 expression was significantly poorer than in negative cases (P= 0.0106). Multivariate analysis revealed that T grade, M grade and claudin-18 expression were independent predictors of survival in patients with CRC. We revealed that claudin-18 expression correlates with poor survival in patients with CRC and is associated with the gastric phenotype.
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