Acta Med. 2008, 51: 185-190

https://doi.org/10.14712/18059694.2017.22

Monitoring of Serum Levels of Angiogenin, ENA-78 and GRO Chemokines in Patients with Renal Cell Carcinoma (RCC) in the Course of the Treatment

Dagmar Hlávkováa, Otakar Kopeckýb,c, Šárka Lukešováb,c, Vladimíra Vroblováa, Ctirad Andrýsa, Petr Morávekd, Miroslav Podholae, Doris Vokurkováa, Hynek Šafránekd

aCharles University in Prague, Faculty of Medicine in Hradec Králové and University Hospital Hradec Králové, Department of Clinical Immunology and Allergology, Hradec Králové, Czech Republic
bCharles University in Prague, Faculty of Medicine in Hradec Králové and University Hospital Hradec Králové, Oncological Department of District Hospital, Náchod, Czech Republic
cCharles University in Prague, Faculty of Medicine in Hradec Králové and University Hospital Hradec Králové, 2nd Department of Internal Medicine, Hradec Králové, Czech Republic
dCharles University in Prague, Faculty of Medicine in Hradec Králové and University Hospital Hradec Králové, Department of Urology, Hradec Králové, Czech Republic
eCharles University in Prague, Faculty of Medicine in Hradec Králové and University Hospital Hradec Králové, Fingerland’s Department of Pathology, Hradec Králové, Czech Republic

Received December 1, 2007
Accepted June 1, 2008

Tumour progression requires the presence of a rich vascular supply. A number of cytokines, chemokines and proteases participate in the process of tumour angiogenesis. We evaluated serum levels of angiogenin, panGRO (Growth Related Oncogene) (CXCL 1,2,3) and ENA-78 (Epithelial Neutrophil Activating) (CXCL5) in the serum of 32 patients with RCC (renal cell carcinoma) and 14 healthy blood donors by means of a protein array analysis. The patients were divided into three groups according to their disease stages (I+II, III, IV). We discovered significant differences between the blood donors and patients with RCC both in pre-operative and post-operative angiogenin, panGRO and ENA-78 levels. The increase in angiogenic factors lasted in patients even without metastases 2 months after surgery. We found no correlation between the levels of angiogenin and stages I+II, III and IV RCC. Patients with advanced carcinoma (stage III) had pre-operatively higher serum levels of ENA-78 than patients with stages I+II (p = 0,009) and IV (p< 0.001). Eight weeks after surgery the patients with stages I+II had significantly higher levels of panGRO than patients with stage IV.

Funding

This article came into existence thanks to the grant No. NR/8914–4 provided for our research project by the Internal Grant Agency.

References

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