Higher serum nitrate levels are associated with poor survival in lung cancer patients

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Date

2006

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Pergamon-Elsevier Science

Abstract

Objectives: Angiogenic factors induce tumour growth and angiogenesis which leads to tumour metastasis and a poor survival rate. This study aimed to assess the possible roles of nitric oxide (NO) and vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A) in the overall survival of patients with late stage lung cancer. Design and methods: The study was carried out with primary lung carcinoma patients (n = 31) and healthy controls (n = 15). Pre- and post-cisplatin-based chemotherapy serum nitrite/nitrate levels were measured as nitrite after enzymatic conversion followed by Griess reaction and serum VEGF-A analysis was performed using ELISA. After patient follow-up, survival rates were calculated by using the Kaplan-Meier method [Dudek et al. Cancer Invest 2005; 23(3):193-200]. Results: The serum nitrite/nitrate and VEGF-A levels of lung cancer patients and the control group were 93.7 +/- 48.9 and 63.7 +/- 32.2 PM (p=0.018), and 620 +/- 491 and 255 +/- 157 pg/mL (p = 0.001), respectively, High nitrite/nitrate (> 67.2 mu M) concentration had statistically significant effects on overall survival (Cox analysis, p = 0.026). The overall survival of the lung cancer patients with higher serum nitrate concentrations was significantly less than the ones with lower serum nitrite/nitrate (Kaplan-Meier survival functions test, log rank significance = 0.0007). Conclusion: Our results suggest that having a high serum nitrite/nitrate concentration is a strong indicator of poor survival for late stage lung cancer patients. However, this conclusion deserves to be elucidated further by using a larger sample size.

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Keywords

Medical laboratory technology, Vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A), Survival, Serum nitrite/nitrate, Nitric oxide (NO), Lung cancer, Activation, Roles, Cisplatin, Metastasis, Expression, Angiogenesis, Small-cell, P53 gene mutation, Nitric-oxide synthase, Endothelial growth-factor

Citation

Çolakoğulları, M. vd. (2006). ''Higher serum nitrate levels are associated with poor survival in lung cancer patients''. Clinical Biochemistry, 39(9), 898-903.