DPC4 Gene Status of the Primary Carcinoma Correlates With Patterns of Failure in Patients With Pancreatic Cancer
Johns Hopkins University · Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
Abstract
Rapid autopsies were performed on 76 patients with documented pancreatic cancer. The histologic features of end stage disease were determined and correlated to the stage at initial diagnosis, patterns of failure (locally destructive v metastatic disease) and the status of the KRAS2, TP53, and DPC4 genes.
At autopsy, 30% of patients died with locally destructive pancreatic cancer, and 70% died with widespread metastatic disease. These divergent patterns of failure found at autopsy (locally destructive v metastatic) were unrelated to clinical stage at initial presentation, treatment history, or histopathologic features. However, Dpc4 immunolabeling status of carcinoma tissues harvested at autopsy, a sensitive marker of DPC4 genetic status, was highly correlated with the presence of widespread metastasis but not with locally destructive tumors (P = .007).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 39
Authors
20- CAChristine A. Iacobuzio–DonahueCorresponding
Johns Hopkins University, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
- BFBaojin Fu
Johns Hopkins University, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
- SYShinichi Yachida
Johns Hopkins University, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
- MLMingde Luo
Johns Hopkins University, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
- HAHisashi Abe
Johns Hopkins University, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Stage (stratigraphy)
- Pancreatic cancer
- Autopsy
- Disease
- Metastasis
- Cancer
- Internal medicine
- Good health and well-being