Abstract

The kinesin super-family protein (KIF) 4A gene is reported to be overexpressed and associated with poor clinical prognosis in human cancers; however, its clinical significance in prostate cancer (PCa) has not been well studied. The present study performed dataset analyses and revealed that KIF4A expression was significantly increased in castration-resistant PCa patients. Additionally, KIF4A expression was significantly highly expressed in PCa tissues compared with non-cancerous tissues, particularly in advanced PCa pathological stages. Upregulated KIF4A mRNA expression in PCa tissues was significantly correlated with shorter overall survival and prostate-specific antigen failure. Furthermore, both univariate and multivariate analyses revealed that upregulated KIF4A may predict poor biochemical recurrence (BCR)-free survival. The data suggested that KIF4A may play a key role in PCa progression. Notably, increased KIF4A expression may potentially predict poor BCR-free survival in PCa patients.

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