Association of serum transforming growth factor-β1 with radiation injury and survival of patients with early-stage nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
- Author:
Guorong ZOU
1
;
Xiaohui LIN
;
Jiehong WU
;
Jiazhu HU
;
Chao ZHANG
;
Jishi LI
;
Yihua LI
;
Xiaolong CAO
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Carcinoma; Case-Control Studies; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Nasopharyngeal Neoplasms; blood; mortality; radiotherapy; Radiation Injuries; blood; Survival Rate; Transforming Growth Factor beta1; blood
- From: Journal of Southern Medical University 2012;32(8):1171-1174
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo observe the changes in serum transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) in patients with early-stage nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) after radiotherapy and explore the correlation of serum TGF-β1 with radiation injury and disease-free survival.
METHODSThe average serum TGF-β1 level (50.2∓3.2 ng/ml) determined from 32 healthy volunteers was used as the standard value for NPC patients in this trial. Fifty-seven patients with early-stage (T1-2N0-1M0) NPC without prior treatment were divided into two groups with serum TGF-β1 level before treatment lower than or equal to the standard value (group A, 29 cases) and a level beyond the standard value (group B, 28 cases). Serum TGF-β1 level was determined in all the patients before, during and after the radiotherapy to evaluate the radiation injury and therapeutic effect.
RESULTSThe serum TGF-β1 level before radiotherapy was significantly lower in group A than in group B (35.4∓1.4 vs 58.8∓1.0 ng/ml, P<0.05). After radiotherapy, acute radiation mucositis and skin reaction was significantly severer in group B (P<0.05). The serum TGF-β1 level before radiotherapy was significantly higher in patients with grade 3 acute radiation mucositis and skin reaction than in those with injuries below grade 3 (54.0∓2.2 vs 42.0∓2.3 ng/ml and 54.3∓2.4 vs 43.4∓2.2 ng/ml, P<0.05). The two groups showed no significant differences in the locoregional failure rate (3.4% vs 7.1%), distant metastasis rate (3.4% vs 10.8%) or disease-free survival (P>0.05).
CONCLUSIONSRadiotherapy can significantly decrease serum TGF-β1 level in early NPC patients. Serum TGF-β1 level before radiotherapy can help predict the degree of acute radiation mucositis and skin reaction, but shows no correlation with disease-free survival of early-stage NPC patients.