Background: Soluble interleukin-2 receptor alpha (slL-2Ralpha) is a well-known indicator of T-cell activation noted to be increasing in nasopharyngeal cancer. The aims of this study were to evaluate the importance of the use of this marker in nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
Methods: Our prospective study interested 45 patients (35M/10F) with a mean age of 49 years (15 to 78), presenting a nasopharyngeal carcinoma histologically confirmed and 61 healthy controls. A blood sample was collected from each patient before any treatment, as well as controls to measure sIL-2Ralpha by immunoenzymatic assay. According to the disease status after a period of follow-up ranging from three to 22 months (median 12 months), patients were divided into two groups: The remission group (n=28) represented those with favourable evolution and a second group of 15 patients with unfavourable evolution (2 death, 4 cases of persistent primary disease and 9 patients with distance metastasis). 2 patients were lost to follow-up.
Results: serum sIL-2Ralpha levels were significantly higher in patients vs healthy controls (p < 0.0001). The serum levels correlated with the stage T of NPC (p = 0.01). Patients having a favourable evolution have lower sIL-2Ralpha levels before treatment vs those with unfavourable evolution without statistical difference.
Conclusion: Measurement of serum sIL-2Ralpha provides a good estimation of the nasopharyngeal tumor burden. The usefulness of this marker as a parameter to predict prognosis in NPC should be examined further.