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X. Zhu



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    MA 16 - Mediastinal, Tracheal and Esophageal Tumor: Multimodality Approaches (ID 675)

    • Event: WCLC 2017
    • Type: Mini Oral
    • Track: Thymic Malignancies/Esophageal Cancer/Other Thoracic Malignancies
    • Presentations: 1
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      MA 16.14 - c-Met in Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma: An Independent Prognostic Factor and Potential Therapeutic Target (ID 10539)

      17:10 - 17:15  |  Author(s): X. Zhu

      • Abstract
      • Presentation
      • Slides

      Background:
      c-Met is reported to serve as a poor prognostic factor in many malignant tumors. Previous studies have suggested the involvement of c-Met in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC), but the correlation between c-Met status and clinical outcome remains unclear. Furthermore, the identification of a novel molecular therapeutic target might potentially help improve the clinical outcome of ESCC patients.

      Method:
      The expression of c-Met was immunohistochemically assessed in 180 surgically obtained tissue specimens. The correlation between c-Met expression and patients’ clinicopathological features, including survival, was evaluated. We also investigated changes in cell functions and protein expression of c-Met and its downstream signaling pathway components under treatments with c-Met inhibitor in ESCC cell line.

      Result:
      There was no significantly correlated between c-Met expression and patients’ clinicopathological features. However, there was a significant difference in OS (median: 41.9 vs. 56.7 months; p= 0.001) between the high c-Met and low/negative c-Met expressing groups. In subgroup of patients with adjuvant radiotherapy, high expression of c-Met was correlated with poor disease prognosis (p= 0.002), while there was no significant correlation in patients with adjuvant chemotherapy. In addition, multivariate analysis identified the high expression of c-Met as an independent prognostic factor. Treatment with c-Met inhibitor significantly inhibited the growth of an ESCC cell line with high c-Met mRNA expression. Moreover, c-Met and its downstream signaling inactivation was also detected after treatment with c-Met inhibitor.

      Conclusion:
      The results of our study identified c-Met expression as an independent prognostic factor in ESCC and demonstrated that c-Met could be a potential molecular therapeutic target for the treatment of ESCC with high c-Met expression.

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