by Abhinav Kumar, Ian H. Bellayr, Hridaya S. Singh, Raj K. Puri
Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare but aggressive endocrine malignancy that usually results in a fatal outcome. To allow the better clinical management and reduce mortality, we searched for clinical and molecular markers that are reliable predictor of disease severity and clinical outcome in ACC patients. We determined a correlation between the overexpression of
IL-13Rα2 and the clinical outcome in ACC patients using comprehensive data available in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database. The dataset of 79 ACC subjects were divided into groups of low, medium, or high expression of
IL-13Rα2 as determined by RNA-seq. These patients were also stratified by length of survival, overall survival, incidence of a new tumor event, incidence of metastasis, and production of excess hormones. We report a correlation between
IL-13Rα2 expression and survival of subjects with ACC. High expression of
IL-13Rα2 in ACC tumors was significantly associated with a low er patient survival rate and period of survival compared to low expression (p = 0.0084). In addition, high
IL-13Rα2 expression was significantly associated with a higher incidence of new tumor events and excess hormone production compared to low or medium
IL-13Rα2 expression. Within the cohort of patients that produced excess hormone, elevated
IL-13Rα2 expression was significantly associated with a lower survival rate. Additionally,
IL-13Rα1 had a potential relationship between transcript level and ACC survival. Our results and promising antitumor activity in preclinical models and trials indicate that
IL-13Rα2 expression is an important prognostic biomarker of ACC disease outcome and a promising target for therapeutic treatment of ACC.
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