Cancers (Jun 2020)

Y Chromosome Loss Is a Frequent Event in Barrett’s Adenocarcinoma and Associated with Poor Outcome

  • Heike Loeser,
  • Christina B. Wölwer,
  • Hakan Alakus,
  • Seung-Hun Chon,
  • Thomas Zander,
  • Reinhard Buettner,
  • Axel M. Hillmer,
  • Christiane J. Bruns,
  • Wolfgang Schroeder,
  • Florian Gebauer,
  • Alexander Quaas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12071743
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
p. 1743

Abstract

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Background: The loss of the Y chromosome in various malignant diseases has been described previously. There are no reliable information on the actual frequency, significance and homogeneity of Y chromosome loss (LoY) in esophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC). Methods: 400 male EAC including lymph-node metastases were analyzed with commercially available Y chromosome specific fluorescence in-situ probes. The results were correlated with molecular and immunohistochemical markers and clinicopathological aspects. Results: The entire cohort (n = 400) showed a singular LoY of one chromosome arm in 1.0% (q-arm) and 2.8% (p-arm), complete LoY in 52.5%. LoY was strongly associated with shortened overall-survival (OS). Patients with preserved Y chromosome had a median OS of 58.8 months, patients with LoY an OS of 19.4 months (p LoY as an independent prognostic marker with a hazard ratio of 1.835 (95% CI 1.233–2.725). LoY correlated with TP53 mutations (p = 0.003), KRAS amplification (p = 0.004), loss of ARID1a (p = 0.045) and presence of LAG3 (p = 0.018). Conclusions: Loss of the Y chromosome is a very common phenomenon in EAC. The LoY is heterogeneously distributed within the tumor, but corresponding lymph node metastases frequently show homogeneous LoY, indicating a selection and metastasizing advantage with poor prognosis. To date, the male predominance of EAC (7–9:1) is unclear, so genetic explanatory models are favored. The LoY in EAC may be biologically and functionally relevant and additional genomic or functional analyses are needed.

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