Low prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase-2 gene expression in colorectal carcinomas may predict poorer survival
Uchenna Simon Ezenkwa, Sebastian Anebuokhae Omenai, Oluwadamilare Iyapo, Chinedu Anthony Ezekekwu, Adesoji E Adetona, Chima Uzoma Akunwata, Ayotunde Oladunmi Ale, Henry Okwuchukwu Ebili

TL;DR
Low expression of the ptgs2 gene in colorectal cancer is linked to worse survival outcomes, suggesting a need for targeted treatment.
Contribution
This study identifies low ptgs2 expression as a potential prognostic marker for poorer survival in colorectal carcinoma patients.
Findings
CRC cases with low ptgs2 expression had significantly worse overall survival (p = 0.018).
Histological subtype, lymphovascular invasion, and cancer stage were significantly associated with lower ptgs2 expression.
Gene methylation was found to be associated with reduced ptgs2 expression.
Abstract
Prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase-2 (ptgs2), otherwise called Cyclooxygenase 2, is overexpressed in colorectal carcinoma (CRC) compared to normal tissues. However, the impact of differential expression among ptgs2-positive tumours on CRC prognosis has not been well investigated. By sub-stratifying positive tumour expression, this study determined its potential influence on patients’ outcomes. The Cancer Genome Atlas database was explored to determine CRC cases with RNA-Sequence (RNA-Seq) transcript data and matched clinicopathological data alongside gene copy number variation and methylation status. Descriptive, chi-square, Fisher exact, Linear-by-Linear associations, logistic and Kaplan-Meier statistics were used to determine proportions, associations, predictors and survival between ptgs2 and tumour parameters using Statistical Package for Social Sciences version 20. Two-tailed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInflammatory mediators and NSAID effects · Cancer, Lipids, and Metabolism · Estrogen and related hormone effects
