Abstract
To investigate the expression of PIGF and its receptor Flt-1 in patients with multiple myeloma, and to analyze their correlation with the efficacy of thalidomide-based chemotherapy so as to provide further theoretical basis for individualized treatment. A total of 35 patients diagnosed as multiple myeloma from June 2012 to March 2013 in our hospital and 15 non-tumor patients as controls were enrolled in this study. MM patients were treated with thalidomide-based chemotherapy for 3 months, and then were grouped according to the curative effecacy. The expression levels of PIGF and Flt-1 were detected in bone marrow of control and MM patient group by RT-PCR and Western blot before and after chemotherapy, their correlation with chemotherapeutic efficacy was analyzed. Serum concentrations of PITG and Flt-1 were detected in control and MM patients before and after chemotherapy by ELISA and their correlation with the chemotherapeutic efficacy was analyzed. The effective rate of three-months-thalidomide-based chemotherapy was 54.3% in MM patients. The expression levels of PIGF and Flt-1 in MM patients' bone marrow were obviously higher than those in controls. After chemotherapy, PIGF and Flt-1 expression levels significantly reduced and the decline level was positively correlated with curative effecacy(r=0.71). The serum concentrations of PIGF and Flt-1 in MM patients' bone marrow were obviously higher than those in control. After chemotherapy, serum concentrations of PIGF and Flt-1 were significantly decreased and the decline level positively correlated with curative effecacy(r=0.87). PIGF and FLT-1 are highly expressed in patients with multiple myeloma, and their expression levels positively correlates with curative effecacy of thalidomide-based chemotherapy.
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