Abstract

Recent accumulating evidence indicates the biological actions of Autotaxin-Lysophosphatidic acid (ATX-LPA) signaling axis in malignant tumors. However, the role of Autotaxin-Lysophosphatidic acid signaling axis in breast cancer has not been reported. The present study aims to examine the alterations of serum autotaxin in breast cancer and discuss whether serum autotaxin could be useful as a novel parameter of breast cancer.Serum autotaxin antigen was measured in 112 patients with breast cancer and 50 healthy volunteers by ELISA. The association of serum autotaxin antigen levels with clinicopathological parameters and outcomes of breast cancer was analyzed.Serum autotaxin antigen was significantly higher in breast cancer patients than healthy volunteers (291.32 ± 38.02 ng/ml vs 254.04 ± 21.03 ng/ml, respectively; P < .0001). Serum autotaxin measurement successfully discriminated breast cancer patients from normal and healthy controls (AUC = 0.798, 95% CI: 0.732–0.864) with an optimal cut-off value of 267.34 ng/ml (sensitivity = 0.741, specificity = 0.800). Increased serum autotaxin was associated with breast cancer nodal status (P = .007), Tumor-Node- Metastasis (TNM) stage (P = .009) and Ki-67 index (P = .004). Univariate and multivariate Cox regression analysis revealed that elevated serum autotaxin showed an independent prognostic value for poor Disease-free survival.Our present study confirmed the elevation, potential diagnostic, and independent prognostic value of serum autotaxin for breast cancer. Serum autotaxin could serve as a reliable novel biomarker for breast cancer.

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