Expression of Bcl-2 predicts outcome in locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer patients treated with cisplatin-based concurrent chemoradiotherapy.

Journal: Lung Cancer (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Published:
Abstract

Background: Platinum-based concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRT) is a standard treatment for locally advanced unresectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The determination of parameters that may predict the result of the treatment has strong clinical implications.

Methods: Pretreatment tumor biopsy specimens from 39 patients with locally advanced NSCLC (stage IIIA: 5, stage IIIB: 34) were analyzed for p53, Bcl-2, Bax and ERCC1 expression by immunohistochemistry. All patients were treated with cisplatin-based CCRT. Twenty-four patients received induction chemotherapy followed by CCRT (60Gy/30 fractions, 6mg/m(2) of cisplatin daily). The most commonly administered induction chemotherapy regimen was VIP (etoposide, ifosfamide, cisplatin; 20 patients). Fifteen patients received the same CCRT without induction chemotherapy.

Results: High expression of p53, Bcl-2, Bax and ERCC1 was observed in 15 (38%), 19 (49%), 17 (44%) and 12 (31%) patients, respectively. High expression of Bcl-2 was significantly associated with longer survival duration (20 months vs. 9 months, P=0.008) and better response to the treatment (74% vs. 30%, P=0.01). In multivariate analysis, Bcl-2 expression was the only significant independent prognostic factor of overall survival (P=0.007) among the pretreatment patients characteristics.

Conclusions: High expression of Bcl-2 may be a useful prognostic factor in locally advanced NSCLC patients treated with cisplatin-based CCRT.

Authors
Seong Jeong, Jae Jung, Jae Han, Jang Kim, Yong-won Choi, Hyun Lee, Seok Kang, Yoon Hwang, Mi Ahn, Jin-hyuk Choi, Young Oh, Mison Chun, Seunghee Kang, Kwang Park, Sung Hwang, Seung Sheen