Diagnostic and prognostic value of serum soluble B7-H3 in nonsmall cell lung cancer

Author:

Li Yinpeng1,Xu Leiqian2,Li Jing1,Wang Qian1,Ma Jiao1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Respiratory and Critical Care, Hebei PetroChina Central Hospital, Langfang, China

2. Department of Surgery, Charite-University Medicine Berlin, Campus Benjamin Franklin (CBF), Germany

Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate the utility of serum soluble B7-H3 (sB7-H3) as a diagnostic marker for early-stage nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and its potential for evaluating the prognosis of patients with advanced-stage NSCLC. In this study, an ELISA was employed to detect the expression levels of sB7-H3 in a cohort of patients diagnosed with NSCLC (n = 122) and a control group (n = 42) during the same observation period. Comparative analyses were conducted to ascertain the variations in sB7-H3 concentrations between the NSCLC cohort and the healthy control group, as well as across pathological types and the presence and absence of lymph node metastasis. (1) The concentration of sB7-H3 in patients diagnosed with NSCLC exhibited a statistically significant increase compared to that observed in the healthy control group (P < 0.05). Elevated expression levels of sB7-H3 demonstrated a significant correlation with pathological type, lymph node metastasis, tumor, node and metastasis stage and programmed cell death ligand (PD-L1) expression (P < 0.05). (2) The diagnostic utility of sB7-H3 for the diagnosis of NSCLC and the heightened expression of PD-L1 demonstrated high levels of sensitivity and specificity. (3) Elevated levels of sB7-H3 emerged as an independent risk factor impacting the overall survival of patients diagnosed with advanced NSCLC. The findings of this study suggest that sB7-H3 holds promise as a diagnostic tool for early-stage NSCLC. The elevated expression of sB7-H3 appears to serve as a reliable indicator for assessing the prognosis of patients diagnosed with advanced NSCLC.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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