Erschienen in:
01.10.2003 | Original Article
Enhanced expression of the complement regulatory protein CD55 predicts a poor prognosis in colorectal cancer patients
verfasst von:
L. G. Durrant, M. A. Chapman, D. J. Buckley, I. Spendlove, R. A. Robins, N. C. Armitage
Erschienen in:
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy
|
Ausgabe 10/2003
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Abstract
This study prospectively correlated the level of expression of CD55 on tumours with 7-year survival in 136 colorectal cancer patients. Patients with tumours expressing high levels of CD55 had a significantly worse survival (24%) than patients with low CD55 levels (50%, p<0.02). A similar difference was seen for patients (Duke's B or C) with a high risk of recurrence (29% vs 58%, p<0.05). Furthermore, there was a progressive deterioration in prognosis with increasing antigen expression (p=0.01). It remains unclear if CD55 is overexpressed by tumours to protect them from complement or if it is related to the recent observation that CD55 is a ligand for the T-cell activation antigen CD97. However, it is a marker of aggression, as colorectal cancer patients whose tumours overexpress CD55 have a significantly reduced 7-year survival.