Abstract

Pancreatitis-associated protein (PAP) and regenerating protein 1 alpha (Reg1A) are up-regulated during the pancreas regeneration. This study is to investigate the clinicopathologic denotation of their expression in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). PAP and REG1A mRNA levels were measured in 265 surgically removed unifocal primary HCCs using reverse transcription-PCR. PAP and REG1A mRNAs were detected in 97 (36.6%) and 55 (20.8%) HCCs, respectively, including 46 with coexpression but in none of the 219 nontumorous livers. HCCs with PAP expression correlated with low-stage tumors without evidence of vascular invasion (P = 0.013) but the REG1A expression did not. By a combination analysis, HCCs with PAP expression alone showed the lowest frequency of p53 mutation (P < 0.036), the highest rates of grade 1 and low-stage tumors (P < 0.007 and P < 0.001, respectively), less frequent early tumor recurrence (P = 0.051), and hence a better 5-year survival (P = 0.044) than groups expressing PAP and REG1A, REG1A alone, and neither PAP or REG1A. Besides, PAP expressing HCCs had significantly frequent beta-catenin mutation, regardless of REG1A expression, P < 0.00001. In the subset of HCCs that has no mutations of p53 and beta-catenin but showed PAP expression, coexpression of REG1A and PAP was associated with more frequent vascular invasion than PAP expression alone (P < 0.005). These data suggest that PAP expression designate a subset of low-grade, low-stage HCC with frequent beta-catenin mutation and hence more favorable prognosis, whereas further genetic or epigenetic alterations, such as p53 mutation and REG1A expression, lead to more advanced HCCs.

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