Objective: The clinical outcome of prostate cancer (PC) is extremely variable and therefore difficult to predict at the early stage of the disease. Since curative-intended therapies are bound up with the risk of severe adverse events, identification of new prognostic markers in PC is essential in individualized clinical treatment. The Smarcc1 protein, a part of the intranuclear SWI/SNF complex, is up-regulated in PC, and has been suggested to be implicated in tumour dedifferentiation, progression and biochemical recurrence. This makes Smarcc1 a possible candidate marker for PC survival.
Material and methods: Immunohistochemistry was used to measure protein expression levels of Smarcc1in on a tissue microarray containing specimens from 100 patients suffering from clinically localized PC treated with no intention to cure and followed to death.
Results: The median age at diagnosis was 75.5 years (55-95 years) and the median survival time was 5 years (0.01-15 years). In total, 41 patients (41%) died of PC. Statistically, there was no significant association between Smarcc1 immunostaining (negative/positive) and Gleason score (p = 0.7/0.8) or the clinical T stage (p = 0.9). Positive staining for Smarcc1 in patients with clinically localized PC correlated with a prolonged disease-free survival as opposed to negative staining (p = 0.025).
Conclusion: In patients with clinically localized PC treated without intention of cure, Smarcc1 expression was a statistically significant and independent predictor of disease-specific survival.