Intermittent hypoxia is associated with high hypoxia inducible factor-1α but not high vascular endothelial growth factor cell expression in tumors of cutaneous melanoma patients

Author

Almendros López, Isaac

Martínez García, Miguel Ángel

Campos Rodríguez, Francisco

Riveiro Falkenbach, Erica

Rodríguez Peralto, José Luis

Nagore, Eduardo

Martorell Calatayud, Antonio

Hernández Blasco, Luis

Bañuls Roca, Jose

Chiner Vives, Eusebi

Sánchez de la Torre, Alicia

Abad Capa, Jorge

Montserrat Canal, José Ma.

Pérez Gil, Amalia

Cabriada Nuño, Valentín

Cano Pumarega, Irene

Corral Peñafiel, Jaime

Diaz Cambriles, Trinidad

Mediano, Olga

Dalmau Arias, Joan

Farré Ventura, Ramon

Gozal, David

Publication date

2019-12-09T16:36:10Z

2019-12-09T16:36:10Z

2018-04-26

2019-12-09T16:36:10Z

Abstract

Epidemiological associations linking between obstructive sleep apnea and poorer solid malignant tumor outcomes have recently emerged. Putative pathways proposed to explain that these associations have included enhanced hypoxia inducible factor (HIF)-1α and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) cell expression in the tumor and altered immune functions via intermittent hypoxia (IH). Here, we examined relationships between HIF-1α and VEGF expression and nocturnal IH in cutaneous melanoma (CM) tumor samples. Prospectively recruited patients with CM tumor samples were included and underwent overnight polygraphy. General clinical features, apnea-hypopnea index (AHI), desaturation index (DI4%), and CM characteristics were recorded. Histochemical assessments of VEGF and HIF-1α were performed, and the percentage of positive cells (0, <25, 25-50, 51-75, >75%) was blindly tabulated for VEGF expression, and as 0, 0-5.9, 6.0-10.0, >10.0% for HIF-1α expression, respectively. Cases with HIF-1α expression >6% (high expression) were compared with those <6%, and VEGF expression >75% of cells was compared with those with <75%. 376 patients were included. High expression of VEGF and HIF-1α were seen in 88.8 and 4.2% of samples, respectively. High expression of VEGF was only associated with increasing age. However, high expression of HIF-1α was significantly associated with age, Breslow index, AHI, and DI4%. Logistic regression showed that DI4% [OR 1.03 (95% CI: 1.01-1.06)] and Breslow index [OR 1.28 (95% CI: 1.18-1.46)], but not AHI, remained independently associated with the presence of high HIF-1α expression. Thus, IH emerges as an independent risk factor for higher HIF-1α expression in CM tumors and is inferentially linked to worse clinical CM prognostic indicators.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Melanoma; Síndromes d'apnea del son; Tumors; Melanoma; Sleep apnea syndromes; Tumors

Publisher

Frontiers Media

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2018.00272

Frontiers In Neurology, 2018, vol. 9, p. 272

https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2018.00272

Rights

cc-by (c) Almendros López, Isaac et al., 2018

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es