Abstract

Survivin, a member of the inhibitor-of-apoptosis family, is reported to be overexpressed in esophageal cancer but no data are available about its status in the metaplastic/dysplastic sequence. The aim of this study was to measure survivin gene expression in normal squamous/columnar epithelium and in the various stages of development of Barrett's adenocarcinoma. Endoscopic biopsy or operative specimen samples from 5 tissue types were analyzed: (1) squamous epithelium from 3 cm above the gastroesophageal junction in patients with a negative pH study and no histologic injury (n = 17, pH- control); (2) antral tissue from patients with no evidence of Barrett's, dysplasia, or cancer (n = 29, antral control); (3) specialized intestinal metaplasia from patients with Barrett's esophagus (n = 16; Barrett's group); (4) low- or high-grade dysplasia (n = 12, dysplasia group), and (5) adenocarcinoma (n = 45 cancer group). After laser-capture microdissection cellular RNA was extracted from each tissue and reverse transcribed to complementary DNA. Expression levels of survivin were measured by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. Survivin gene expression was greater in columnar (antral) compared with squamous (pH-) control tissues (P = .03). Expression in quiescent Barrett's epithelium was similar to both control tissues. Expression levels in dysplastic epithelium were greater than in squamous control (P = .01) and Barrett's tissues (P = .04), but not higher than columnar control tissues, whereas expression in adenocarcinoma was greater than all tissues except dysplasia (P < .001). Survivin expression may be a biomarker in the development of Barrett's adenocarcinoma that is able to distinguish between quiescent Barrett's, dysplastic Barrett's, and Barrett's adenocarcinoma.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call