Genetic alterations in hormone-refractory recurrent prostate carcinomas

NN Nupponen, L Kakkola, P Koivisto… - The American journal of …, 1998 - Elsevier
NN Nupponen, L Kakkola, P Koivisto, T Visakorpi
The American journal of pathology, 1998Elsevier
To study the genetic basis of tumor progression, we have screened 37 hormone-refractory
prostate carcinomas for genetic changes by comparative genomic hybridization (CGH). All
recurrent tumors showed genetic aberrations, with a mean total number of changes per
tumor of 11.4 (range, 3 to 23). The most common genetic aberrations were losses of 8p
(72.5%), 13q (50%), 1p (50%), 22 (45%), 19 (45%), 10q (42.5%), and 16q (42.5%) and
gains of 8q (72.5%), 7q (40%), Xq (32.5%), and 18q (32.5%). The CGH results were further …
To study the genetic basis of tumor progression, we have screened 37 hormone-refractory prostate carcinomas for genetic changes by comparative genomic hybridization (CGH). All recurrent tumors showed genetic aberrations, with a mean total number of changes per tumor of 11.4 (range, 3 to 23). The most common genetic aberrations were losses of 8p (72.5%), 13q (50%), 1p (50%), 22 (45%), 19 (45%), 10q (42.5%), and 16q (42.5%) and gains of 8q (72.5%), 7q (40%), Xq (32.5%), and 18q (32.5%). The CGH results were further validated with fluorescence in situhybridization (FISH) using probes for pericentromeric regions of chromosomes 7, 8, and 18 as well as probes for caveolin (7q31), c-myc (8q24), and bcl-2 (18q21.3). In addition, the samples had previously been analyzed for androgen receptor gene copy number. CGH and FISH results were concordant in 78% of cases. Seventeen of twenty-two tumors showed an increased copy number of c-myc by FISH. However, only 5 of 17 (29%) of the cases showed high-level (more than threefold) amplification. Both CGH and FISH findings suggested that in most of the cases 8q gain involves the whole q-arm of the chromosome. Four of seventeen (24%) cases showed increased copy number of bcl-2 by FISH; however, no high-level amplifications were found. To evaluate the clonal relationship of the primary and recurrent tumors, six primary-recurrent tumor pairs from the same patients were studied by CGH. In three of six cases (50%), the recurrent tumor had more than one-half of the aberrations found in the corresponding primary tumor, indicating a close clonal relationship. In the rest of the cases, such a linear clonal relationship was less evident. Altogether, these results suggest that recurrent prostate carcinomas are genetically unstable. The resulting heterogeneity may well underlie the poor responsiveness of hormone-refractory tumors to treatment.
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