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High tumour islet macrophage infiltration correlates with improved patient survival but not with EGFR mutations, gene copy number or protein expression in resected non-small cell lung cancer

Cited 82 time in Web of Science Cited 85 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, D-W; Min, H. S.; Lee, K-H; Kim, Y. J.; Oh, D-Y; Jeon, Y. K.; Lee, S. -H.; Im, S. -A.; Chung, D. H.; Kim, Y. T.; Kim, T. -Y.; Bang, Y. -J.; Sung, S. W.; Kim, J. H.; Heo, D. S.

Issue Date
2008-03
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
British Journal of Cancer, Vol.98 No.6, pp.1118-1124
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate the prognostic value of tumour- associated macrophages with a focus on micro-anatomical localisation and determine whether molecular changes of the epidermal growth factor receptor ( EGFR) are related to macrophage infiltration in resected non- small cell lung cancer ( NSCLC). One hundred and forty- four patients were included in this study. Immunohistochemistry was used to identify CD68+ macrophages in the tumour islet and surrounding stroma. Epidermal growth factor receptor mutations were studied by direct sequencing. The EGFR gene copy number and protein expression were analysed by fluorescence in situ hybridisation and immunohistochemistry. Patients with a high tumour islet macrophage density survived longer than did the patient with a low tumour islet macrophage density ( 5- year overall survival rate was 63.9 vs 38.9%, P = 0.0002). A multivariate Cox proportional hazard analysis revealed that the tumour islet macrophage count was an independent prognostic factor for survival ( hazard ratio 0.471, 95% confidence interval 0.300 - 0.740). However, EGFR mutations, gene copy number, and protein expression were not related to the macrophage infiltration. In conclusion, tumour islet macrophage infiltration was identified as a strong favourable independent prognostic marker for survival but not correlated with the molecular changes of the EGFR in patients with resected NSCLC.
ISSN
0007-0920
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/68230
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6604256
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  • Department of Medicine
Research Area Clinical Medicine

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