Abstract
The alterations of carbohydrate chains in cancer cell membrane can be related, not only to the formation of tumor-associated antigens, but also to cell biologic significance. There is, furthermore, a possibility of their relationship to tumor metastatic behavior and subsequent survival of patients with cancer. Recent clinical studies elucidated that a carbohydrate antigen, sialyl Lex, is a useful tumor marker in colorectal cancer. However, the sialyl Lex antigen immunoreactivity in colorectal carcinoma in relation to patient survival is unknown. The aim of the study was to elucidate whether sialyl Lex expression in tumors was correlated with patient survival. Immunohistochemical expression of sialyl Lex antigen, as detected by monoclonal antibody CSLEX1, was studied in 175 specimens of primary colorectal carcinoma from 120 patients who received radical surgery. The positive expression of sialyl Lex was observed in 87 of 120 patients (72.5%). There was no statistically significant association between the negative or positive of sialyl Lex and clinicopathologic factors, excluding Dukes stage and histologic type. The difference between overall 5-year survival of patients with sialyl Lex-negative tumors and that of patients with sialyl Lex-positive tumors (81.2% versus 60.6%) was statistically significant (P = 0.0263). In proportion to staining intensity that was expressed as a score based on the percentage of the total field stained positive with CSLEX1, 5-year survival of patients indicated a worse outcome (P = 0.0113). The prognostic value was then studied in a Cox regression model. Dukes stage had the strongest association with patient survival, whereas sialyl Lex expression was found to be the second-ranking parameter. When examining the expression of sialyl Lex antigen, as detected by monoclonal antibody CSLEX1, clinically useful information for patient survival after radical resection of colorectal cancer is given.
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