HLA-G as a prognostic marker in stage II/III colorectal cancer: not quite there yet

Author:

Gambella AlessandroORCID,Scabini Stefano,Zoppoli Gabriele,De Silvestri Annalisa,Pigozzi SimonaORCID,Paudice MicheleORCID,Campora MichelaORCID,Fiocca RobertoORCID,Grillo FedericaORCID,Mastracci LucaORCID

Abstract

AbstractIdentifying innovative molecules involved in the tumor immune escape process could help refine the survival stratification of colorectal cancer (CRC) patients. HLA-G, a non-classical HLA molecule, physiologically involved in tolerogenic mechanisms, has recently emerged as a relevant prognostic marker in other tumor types, but ambiguous data are reported in the CRC setting. This study aims to evaluate the HLA-G expression and prognostic potential in a series of stage II/III CRCs. HLA-G expression was evaluated in 100 pT3 CRC cases by means of immunohistochemistry using the 4H84 and MEM-G/2 monoclonal antibodies. We observed heterogeneous expression of HLA-G showing different ranges: 4H84 expression ranged from > 1 to 40%—median 7%; MEM-G/2 expression ranged from 20 to 90%—median 50%. HLA-G positivity (any intensity > 1%) varied according to the antibody employed, identifying: 8 4H84 positive, 34 MEM-G/2 positive, 6 double-positive and 52 negative cases. Correlation with clinico-pathologic data showed a significant association with a poor tumor differentiation in stage III right-sided CRC subgroup (p = 0.043), while no other pathologic variable was significantly associated. Survival analysis revealed a reduced disease-free survival rate (HR 4.304613; p = 0.031) in the subgroup of CRC-related death cases, while no correlations were observed considering the whole series and the overall survival. In conclusion, HLA-G is a promising CRC prognostic marker however much work is still required regarding technical aspects and evaluation of expression.

Funder

Università degli Studi di Genova

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cell Biology,Medical Laboratory Technology,Molecular Biology,Histology

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