Thoracic Cancer (Jan 2020)

Prognostic impact of CD34 and SMA in cancer‐associated fibroblasts in stage I–III NSCLC

  • Arik Bernard Schulze,
  • Lars Henning Schmidt,
  • Birthe Heitkötter,
  • Sebastian Huss,
  • Michael Mohr,
  • Alessandro Marra,
  • Ludger Hillejan,
  • Dennis Görlich,
  • Peter J. Barth,
  • Jan Rehkämper,
  • Georg Evers

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1759-7714.13248
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 120 – 129

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background Epithelial‐to‐mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a crucial step in lung cancer pathogenesis. Among others, cancer‐associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are reported to regulate this process. Objectives To investigate the prognostic and clinical impact, we analyzed CD34+ and SMA+ CAFs in non‐small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Methods Retrospectively, immunohistochemistry was performed to study stromal protein expression of both CD34 and SMA in 304 NSCLC patients with pTNM stage I‐III disease. All tissue samples were embedded on tissue microarrays (TMAs). Results Our analysis revealed an association for CD34+ CAFs with G1/2 tumors and adenocarcinoma histology. Moreover CD34+ CAFs were identified as an independent prognostic factor (both for progression free survival [PFS] and overall survival [OS] in stage I‐III NSCLC). Besides, SMA+ expression correlated with higher pTNM‐tumor stages and lymphatic spread (pN stage). In turn, SMA‐negativity was associated with improved PFS, but no prognostic impact was found on OS. Of interest, neither CD34+ CAFs nor SMA+ CAFs were associated with the primary tumor size, localization and depth of infiltration (pT stage). Conclusions CD34 was identified as an independent prognostic marker in pTNM stage I‐III NSCLC. Moreover, loss of CD34+ CAFs might influence the dedifferentiation of the NSCLC tumor from its cell origin. Finally, SMA+ CAFs are more prevalent in NSCLC tumors of higher stages and lymphonodal positive NSCLC. Key points Expression of CD34 on cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs) is an independent prognostic factor in stage I‐III NSCLC. SMA+ cancer associated fibroblasts are associated with higher tumor stages in NSCLC and might contribute to tumor progression in NSCLC.

Keywords