Clinical significance of soluble form of HLA class I molecule in Japanese patients with pancreatic cancer

In recent studies a soluble form of human leukocyte antigen class I (sHLA-I) has been found in blood, urine, ascitic fluid, and various other tissues. Research has been focused on the role of sHLA-I in the induction of immunotolerance in organ transplantation. To examine the role of sHLA-I in the im...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human immunology 2001-06, Vol.62 (6), p.615-619
Hauptverfasser: Shimura, Tatsuo, Tsutsumi, Souichi, Hosouchi, Yasuo, Kojima, Takahiro, Kon, Youichi, Yonezu, Mayumi, Kuwano, Hiroyuki
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In recent studies a soluble form of human leukocyte antigen class I (sHLA-I) has been found in blood, urine, ascitic fluid, and various other tissues. Research has been focused on the role of sHLA-I in the induction of immunotolerance in organ transplantation. To examine the role of sHLA-I in the immune system of patients with malignancy, we examined serum sHLA-I levels in patients with pancreatic, biliary, hepatic malignancy, and other diseases. We examined sHLA-I levels in the sera of patients with pancreatic cancer ( n = 19), benign biliary disease and chronic pancreatitis ( n = 20), hepatocellular carcinoma ( n = 51), gallbladder cancer ( n = 6), cholangiocellular carcinoma ( n = 6), and in normal controls ( n = 22), using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). In patients with pancreatic cancer we also analyzed the relationship between sHLA-I and CA19-9, and the specificity and sensitivity of sHLA-I. When patients with acute or chronic hepatitis were excluded from analysis, the mean sHLA-I level in patients with pancreatic cancer was significantly higher than that of normal controls ( p < 0.01) and patients with benign disease ( p < 0.01), hepatocellular carcinoma ( p < 0.01), gallbladder cancer ( p < 0.05), and cholangiocarcinoma ( p < 0.05). We determined a serum sHLA-I cutoff level for normal controls of 2000 ng/ml; serum levels of sHLA-I were higher than the cutoff in ten patients with pancreatic cancer, and serum levels of CA19-9 were lower than 37 IU/l in 9 of 14 patients; sensitivity and specificity were 88.2% and 85.5%, respectively. Serum levels of sHLA-I in pancreatic cancer patients were higher than in the other diseases, although we found that pancreatic cancer cell lines did not produce the sHLA-I. The evaluation of serum sHLA-I levels could have clinical significance in pancreatic cancer.
ISSN:0198-8859
1879-1166
DOI:10.1016/S0198-8859(01)00246-4