Title : Increased lipoprotein lipase activity in non-small cell lung cancer tissue predicts shorter patient survival - Trost_2009_Arch.Med.Res_40_364 |
Author(s) : Trost Z , Sok M , Marc J , Cerne D |
Ref : Arch Med Res , 40 :364 , 2009 |
Abstract :
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Cumulative evidence suggests the involvement of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) in tumor progression. We tested the hypothesis that increased LPL activity in resectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) tissue and the increased LPL gene expression in the surrounding non-cancer lung tissue found in our previous study are predictors of patient survival. METHODS: Forty two consecutive patients with resected NSCLC were enrolled in the study. Paired samples of lung cancer tissue and adjacent non-cancer lung tissue were collected from resected specimens for baseline LPL activity and gene expression estimation. During a 4-year follow-up, 21 patients died due to tumor progression. One patient died due to a non-cancer reason and was not included in Cox regression analysis. RESULTS: High LPL activity in cancer tissue (relative to the adjacent non-cancer lung tissue) predicted shorter survival, independently of standard prognostic factors (p=0.003). High gene expression in the non-cancer lung tissue surrounding the tumor had no predictive value. CONCLUSIONS: Our study further underlines the involvement of cancer tissue LPL activity in tumor progression. |
PubMedSearch : Trost_2009_Arch.Med.Res_40_364 |
PubMedID: 19766899 |
Trost Z, Sok M, Marc J, Cerne D (2009)
Increased lipoprotein lipase activity in non-small cell lung cancer tissue predicts shorter patient survival
Arch Med Res
40 :364
Trost Z, Sok M, Marc J, Cerne D (2009)
Arch Med Res
40 :364