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Role of Serine arginine protein kinase 1 and Minichromosome maintenance protein 2 in predicting epithelial ovarian cancer response to treatment and prognosis.

BACKGROUND: Serine-Arginine (SR) proteins are a conserved family of proteins involved in RNA splicing and are reported to be over-expressed in multiple cancers. The aim of the study is evaluation of the expression of Serine arginine protein kinase 1 (SRPK1) and Minichromosome maintenance protein 2 (MCM2) in epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) and their correlation with clinicopathological features, response to therapy, progression-free survival (PFS), and cancer-specific survival (CSS).

METHODS: This study was carried out on surgical specimens of 65 patients diagnosed with EOC which were submitted to immunohistochemical staining by SRPK1 and MCM2 antibodies.

RESULTS: About 89.2% of cases showed SRPK1 expression and its high expression was significantly associated with type II tumors and advanced stage. All cases showed nuclear immunoreaction for MCM2 with high expression in 49.2% of cases. There was a significant relationship between high values of SRPK1 H-score and percentage of MCM2. Postmenopause, type II pathology, advanced stage, absence of complete response to the treatment, resistance to platinum-based chemotherapy, and surgery done by a general surgeon were the factors affecting PFS. Response to treatment and platinum sensitivity were the most independent factors affecting patients' PFS. The factors associated with shorter CSS were suboptimal debulking, advanced stage, absence of complete response to the treatment, platinum resistance, and high SRPK1. High SRPK1 expression and platinum sensitivity were the independent factors affecting patients' CSS.

CONCLUSIONS: SRPK1 is an unfavorable biomarker in EOC patients because of its association with aggressive histologic type, advanced International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage, and worse survival. SRPK1 could promote the proliferation of EOC by up-regulation of MCM2.

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