Endometrial Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Endometrial Cancer and Fractalkine-receptor Axis of Fractalkine
The endometrial cancers are among the most common malignancies in postmenopausal women with
an incidence on the rise. It is most often a endometrioid adenocarcinoma (grade I, II, III).
Other histological types are represented mainly by the clear cell carcinoma, papillary serous
carcinoma, the carcinosarcoma. The main risk factors for endometrial cancer are age, obesity,
diabetes, hypertension, hormone replacement therapy with estrogen and tamoxifen.
Endometrial hyperplasia usually precedes endometrial cancer is classified by degree of
cytologic atypia. Tumor grade quantifies the degree of differentiation and significantly
influences the prognosis. Most research has been applied to define the role of estrogen in
these cancers, however an accumulation of data indicate that the general process of
tumorigenesis is closely related to immune and inflammatory microenvironment of the tumor. In
fact, the microenvironment may be seen as a prognostic parameter of tumors or even predictive
of therapeutic response.
Recognized as the key molecules responsible for leukocyte recruitment into the tissues, the
chemokine-receptor pairs are key players in the immune response, including the anti-tumor
immune response but also the inflammatory response. The chemokine-receptor pairs are also
involved in many other basic processes such as proliferation, survival or cell death.
The objective of this study was to evaluate the prognostic value of the expression of the
chemokine fractalkine (FKN) and its receptor CX3CR1 for the development of endometrioid
adenocarcinomas.
Chemokine FKN has the particularity to exist in two forms, a soluble (FKNs), like all
chemokines and membrane form (FKNm). The FKNs, resulting from proteolytic cleavage of the
FKNm, is provided with chémoattractantes properties. FKNm the present adhesion molecule
properties.
The role of FKN in cancer biology is complex.
To date, the role of FKN in endometrial cancer has not been reported. Similarly, the precise
role of FKN in the physiology of the endometrium is unknown.
Nevertheless, fractalkine is one of the most expressed in endometrial chemokines. The
expression of FKN and its CX3CR1 receptor is detected in the endometrium at all stages of the
menstrual cycle. The respective levels of expression of each are fluctuating and largely
dependent on the cycle of stage suggesting a possible control by estrogen and progesterone
control described elsewhere ovarian level and endothelial. The cells of the endometrial
glandular epithelium, macrophages, neutrophils and NK cells infiltrated in this tissue as
well as the endothelial cells of blood vessels express FKN. Interestingly, all the cells
mentioned above express CX3CR1, except for NK cells and unlike most tissues, the CD8 cells,
present in the endometrium, do not express CX3CR1.
In addition, the strongest expression of FKN and CX3CR1 cells by endometrial epithelial
coincides with the maximum activity of the glandular epithelium suggesting a possible
autocrine loop promoting cell proliferation of the endometrium. Concurrently with the peak of
fractalkine, an accumulation of monocytes / macrophages and neutrophils is observed in the
endometrium. It appears, moreover, that the balance between the soluble and membrane forms of
FKN is important for positioning, infiltration and activity of immune cells within the
endometrium.
Current knowledge on the involvement of FKN / CX3CR1 axis in the physiology of the
endometrium, although incomplete, point unequivocally the potential role of this ligand pair
/ receptor in the physiology of the tissue and also suggest that a malfunction of this axis
could easily cause various diseases.
Chronic inflammation of a tissue, largely dependent on macrophage infiltration rate,
generally represents the tumor development. The endometrium is subjected to physiologically
cyclic and regular inflammatory episodes, mirrors for the expression of chemokines and
leukocyte infiltration. However, prolonged leukocyte infiltration establishing chronic or
prolonged inflammation of the endometrium could help shape a favorable microenvironment in
tumor development. Curiously, the axis FKN / CX3CR1 is involved in the development of several
inflammatory diseases, including obesity and diabetes are also risk factors for endometrial
cancer.
A change in the expression of FKN and / or CX3CR1 is potentially capable of altering the
inflammatory physiological cycle of the endometrium and therefore likely to be an element to
consider in the evaluation of cancer risk factors of the endometrium.
The assumption is that the FKN / CX3CR1 couple could intervene in the pathophysiology of
endometrioid adenocarcinomas.
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