Co-expression patterns of tumor-associated antigen genes by non-small cell lung carcinomas: implications for immunotherapy

V Karanikas, S Tsochas, K Boukas… - Cancer biology & …, 2008 - Taylor & Francis
V Karanikas, S Tsochas, K Boukas, T Kerenidi, M Nakou, J Dahabreh, T Poularakis…
Cancer biology & therapy, 2008Taylor & Francis
Background: Polyvalent vaccination represents a recent attempt to improve the effectiveness
of lung cancer immunotherapy. This study aimed to investigate whether a gene expression
pattern of tumor-associated antigens (TAA) would exist indicating that their use will be most
appropriate for the polyvalent vaccination of Caucasian non-small cell lung carcinoma
(NSCLC) patients. We examined the concomitant expression of genes belonging to different
TAA families for which expression frequencies either have never been detected in NSCLC …
Background
Polyvalent vaccination represents a recent attempt to improve the effectiveness of lung cancer immunotherapy. This study aimed to investigate whether a gene expression pattern of tumor-associated antigens (TAA) would exist indicating that their use will be most appropriate for the polyvalent vaccination of Caucasian non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) patients. We examined the concomitant expression of genes belonging to different TAA families for which expression frequencies either have never been detected in NSCLC or vary widely in the literature.
Methods
Tumor material from 23 patients with NSCLC (12 adenocarcinomas, 8 squamous cell carcinomas, 3 bronchiolo - carcinomas) was examined. mRNA transcripts were detected for 5 genes of the survivin family, 5 MAGE-A genes as well as the genes of human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) and p53, by the use of quantitative real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) or semi-quantitative RT-PCR.
Results
15/23 (65%) and 8/23 (35%) tumor samples were found expressing 6-11 and 2-5 out of the 12 examined TAAs, respectively, at levels >1% of the testis reference sample. The most prevalent TAA patterns observed were those of survivin standard (survivin-std)/survivin-2B expressed by 22/23 (95.5%) tumor samples and of survivin-std/survivin-2B/hTERT expressed by 19/23 (82.5%) tumor samples. The expression levels of the survivin-std gene strongly positively correlated to those of the survivin-2B (p=0.001) and the hTERT genes (p=0.031). The number of concomitantly expressed genes was found to be positively correlated to the age of the patients (p=0.001) and the tumor size (p=0.048).
Conclusion
This study provides evidence that, in Caucasian patients with NSCLC, highly prevalent expression patterns of TAA genes, predominantly of overexpressed TAAs, do exist. This result implies that the combined use of these TAA could help in designing more effective NSCLC immunotherapeutic protocols.
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