Biological significance of p27 and Skp2 expression in renal cell carcinoma. A systematic analysis of primary and metastatic tumour tissues using a tissue microarray technique.

Journal: Virchows Archiv : An International Journal Of Pathology
Published:
Abstract

p27 (p27/kip1) is involved in cell-cycle control, and loss of p27 expression may result in tumour development and/or progression. Association with Skp2 targets p27 for degradation. Using a tissue microarray technique, 171 primary renal cell carcinomas (RCCs) and 58 RCC metastases were immunostained for p27 and Skp2. p27 Immunoreactivity was noted in 83 of 129 (64%) clear cell, 6 of 22 (27%) chromophobe and 15 of 20 (75%) papillary tumours as well as 44 of 58 (76%) metastases. In clear cell cancers, high p27 expression (> or =50% of tumour cells) decreased with rising tumour stage (50% pT1/pT2 versus 20% pT3; P<0.001) and grade (44% G1/G2 versus 21% G3/G4; P=0.008). None of 22 chromophobe cancers showed high expression in contrast to 46 of 129 (36%) clear cell tumours (P<0.001). Skp2 expression was noted in 8 of 129 (6%) clear cell cancers and 11 of 55 (20%) metastases (P=0.008). Immunoreactivity increased with rising tumour stage (1% pT1/pT2 versus 11% pT3; P=0.03) and grade (1% G1/G2 versus 15% G3/G4; P=0.004) and was associated with sarcomatoid morphology (P<0.001). In multivariate analysis, patients with low p27 expression and Skp2 immunoreactivity in clear cell cancers had a less favourable outcome. In conclusion, p27 and Skp2 proved to be additional biomarkers in renal cancer pathology with both prognostic and diagnostic impact.

Authors
Cord Langner, Reinhard Von Wasielewski, Manfred Ratschek, Peter Rehak, Richard Zigeuner
Relevant Conditions

Renal Cell Carcinoma (RCC)