The serum tenascin C level is a marker of metabolic disorder-related inflammation affecting pancreatic cancer prognosis

Obesity is a risk factor for pancreatic cancer development, partly due to the tissue environment of metabolic disorder-related inflammation. We aimed to detect a tissue environment marker triggered by obesity-related metabolic disorders related to pancreatic cancer progression. In murine experiments...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2024-05, Vol.14 (1), p.12028-12028, Article 12028
Hauptverfasser: Sato, Katsuhiko, Hikita, Hayato, Shigekawa, Minoru, Soma, Kazumasa, Yamauchi, Ryohei, Sung, Jihyun, Kato, Seiya, Sasaki, Yoichi, Kudo, Shinnosuke, Fukumoto, Kenji, Shirai, Kumiko, Murai, Kazuhiro, Tahata, Yuki, Yoshioka, Teppei, Nishio, Akira, Saito, Yoshinobu, Kodama, Takahiro, Sasaki, Yutaka, Tatsumi, Tomohide, Takehara, Tetsuo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Obesity is a risk factor for pancreatic cancer development, partly due to the tissue environment of metabolic disorder-related inflammation. We aimed to detect a tissue environment marker triggered by obesity-related metabolic disorders related to pancreatic cancer progression. In murine experiments, Bl6/j mice fed a normal diet (ND) or a high-fat diet (HFD) were orthotopically injected with mPKC1, a murine-derived pancreatic cancer cell line. We used stocked sera from 140 pancreatic cancer patients for analysis and 14 colon polyp patients as a disease control. Compared with ND-fed mice, HFD-fed mice exhibited obesity, larger tumors, and worse prognoses. RNA sequencing of tumors identified tenascin C (TNC) as a candidate obesity-related serum tissue environment marker with elevated expression in tumors of HFD-fed mice. Serum TNC levels were greater in HFD-fed mice than in ND-fed mice. In pancreatic cancer patients, serum TNC levels were greater than those in controls. The TNC-high group had more metabolic disorders and greater CA19-9 levels than did the TNC-low group. There was no relationship between serum TNC levels and disease stage. Among 77 metastatic patients treated with chemotherapy, a high serum TNC concentration was an independent poor prognostic factor. Pancreatic cancer patients with high serum TNC levels experienced progression more rapidly.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-024-62498-x