Biomedicines (Aug 2021)

Prognostic Significance of ROR2 Expression in Patients with Urothelial Carcinoma

  • Cheng-Fa Yeh,
  • Ti-Chun Chan,
  • Hung-Lung Ke,
  • Tzu-Ju Chen,
  • Li-Ching Wu,
  • Hsiang-Ying Lee,
  • Yu-Ching Wei,
  • Wen-Jeng Wu,
  • Chien-Feng Li,
  • Wei-Ming Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines9081054
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
p. 1054

Abstract

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We investigated the association of receptor tyrosine kinase-like orphan receptor 2 (ROR2) expression with clinicopathological features and oncologic outcomes in large urothelial carcinoma (UC) of the upper tract (UTUC) and urinary bladder (UBUC) cohorts. Through transcriptomic profiling of a published dataset (GSE31684), ROR2 was discovered to be the most upregulated gene during UC progression, focusing on the JNK cascade (GO:0007254). Initially, the evaluation of ROR2 mRNA expression in 50 frozen UBUCs showed significantly upregulated levels in high-stage UC. Moreover, high ROR2 immunoexpression significantly correlated with high tumor stage, high tumor grade, lymph node metastasis, and vascular invasion (all p p < 0.01). In the subgroup analysis, it also significantly predicted bladder tumor recurrence in non-muscle invasive UBUC. Furthermore, the GO enrichment analysis showed that fatty acid, monocarboxylic acid, carboxylic acid metabolic processes, negative regulation of neutrophil migration, and negative regulation of granulocyte and neutrophil chemotaxis were significantly enriched by ROR2 dysregulation. In conclusion, high ROR2 immunoexpression was associated with aggressive pathological characteristics in UC and independently predicted worse prognosis, suggesting it could play roles in clinical risk stratification and therapy decisions.

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