Moderate SCRIB Expression Levels Correlate with Worse Prognosis in OPSCC Patients Regardless of HPV Status
Lucija Lulić, Ivana Šimić, Ksenija Božinović, Ena Pešut, Luka Manojlović, Magdalena Grce, Emil Dediol, Ivan Sabol, Vjekoslav Tomaić

TL;DR
Moderate levels of the protein SCRIB are linked to worse outcomes in head and neck cancer patients, regardless of whether the cancer is caused by HPV.
Contribution
This study identifies SCRIB as an independent survival predictor in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma patients.
Findings
Moderate SCRIB expression correlates with worse prognosis in oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma patients.
SCRIB levels were an independent predictor of survival in Cox regression analysis.
The strongest survival association with SCRIB levels was observed in HPV-negative cases.
Abstract
Head and neck cancers rank as the sixth most prevalent cancers globally. In addition to traditional risk factors such as smoking and alcohol use, human papillomavirus (HPV) infections are becoming a significant causative agent of head and neck cancers, particularly among Western populations. Although HPV offers a significant survival benefit, the search for better biomarkers is still ongoing. In the current study, our objective was to investigate whether the expression levels of three PDZ-domain-containing proteins (SCRIB, NHERF2, and DLG1), known HPV E6 cellular substrates, influence the survival of HNSCC patients treated by primary surgery (n = 48). Samples were derived from oropharyngeal and oral cancers, and HPV presence was confirmed by PCR and p16 staining. Clinical and follow-up information was obtained from the hospital database and the Croatian Cancer registry up to November…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer-related gene regulation · Cancer-related Molecular Pathways · Hippo pathway signaling and YAP/TAZ
