NF-κB in the Vascular Progression of Melanoma

Author:

Kashani-Sabet Mohammed1,Shaikh Ladan1,Miller James R.1,Nosrati Mehdi1,Ferreira Carlos M.M.1,Debs Robert J.1,Sagebiel Richard W.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Auerback Melanoma Research Laboratory and Melanoma Center, Cutaneous Oncology Program, Cancer Center, University of California San Francisco; and California Pacific Medical Research Institute, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA

Abstract

Purpose To examine a model of melanoma progression based on vascular factors and the role of NF-κB in the vascular progression of melanoma. Patients and Methods A data set of 526 patients from the University of California San Francisco Melanoma Center with 2 years of follow-up or first relapse was studied. The impact of the presence or absence of various prognostic factors on overall survival of melanoma patients was assessed using Cox regression and Kaplan-Meier analysis. A matched-pair analysis of NF-κB expression was performed in cases with vascular involvement and increased tumor vascularity versus matched controls lacking these factors. Results Cox regression analysis of factors evaluated by the American Joint Committee on Cancer Melanoma Staging Committee reproduced the powerful impact of tumor thickness and ulceration in this data set. With the inclusion of vascular factors such as tumor vascularity and vascular involvement, ulceration was no longer significant in predicting overall survival. By multivariate analysis, vascular involvement and tumor vascularity were the strongest predictors of melanoma outcome. Tumor vascularity seems to be a precursor of both vascular involvement and ulceration. A matched-pair tissue array analysis demonstrated the significant correlation between overexpression of NF-κB–p65 and the development of vascular factors. Conclusion Vascular factors play an important role in the progression of malignant melanoma. Ulceration may be a surrogate marker for the interactions between melanoma and the tumor vasculature. NF-κB seems to play an important role in the development of these factors.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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