Prognostic Role of Matrix Metalloproteinases 2, 7, 8, 9 and Their Type 1 Tissue Inhibitor in Blood Serum of Patients with Kidney Cancer

The study compared the levels of MMP-2,7,8,9, and TIMP-1 in blood serum of healthy people (N=97) and patients with primary renal cell carcinoma (N=93) to assess relevance of these markers to prognosis of overall survival of these patients, which were followed-up over 1 to 45 months (median 26 months). To evaluate the survival with theKaplan —Meier estimator, the median values of examined markers in the total group of patients were taken as the threshold levels. This estimator showed that the high levels of serum MMP-7 and MMP-8 were indicative forunfavorable prognosis in the total group of patients with renal cell cancer. Of them, the most significant marker was the level of MMP-7: at its low level (<6.3 ng/ml), a 3-year survival was 93%, whereas survival dropped down to 51% at a higher value of this marker (p<0.001). For MMP-8, the threshold level was 51 ng/ml, and the corresponding survivals were 78 and 58% (p<0.01). The level of MMP-7 was also prognostically significant for the patients with stage I kidney cancer: during a 3-year follow-up, all the patients with low MMP-7 were alive, while the 3-year survival of the patients with a high level of MMP-7 was only 72% (p=0.02). There were the declining trends for survival at high TIMP-1 and low MMP-2. In contrast, the level of MMP-9 virtually did not correlate with survival of the patients with renal cell cancer.
Source: Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine - Category: Biology Source Type: research