Abstract. The calcium-binding protein, S100A4, with an inverse association of E-cadherin, is known to correlate with prognosis in various cancers. In this study, we investigated the expression of the S100A4 and E-cadherin status in relation to the clinicopathological parameters of pancreatic cancer. The expression status of these two proteins was examined in 72 specimens of primary pancreatic carcinoma with immunohistochemistry. Fifty-six of 72 (78%) surgical specimens of primary pancreatic cancer were positive for S100A4 according to immunohistochemistry. Thirty-one (43%) specimens of pancreatic cancer showed positive expression of E-cadherin. The inverse association of S100A4 and E-cadherin expression was significant in the cancers (p<0.0001). The S100A4 expression correlated significantly with the pathological T stage and poorer prognosis (p=0.024). The 41 E-cadherin-negative cases showed poorer prognoses and a higher incidence of liver metastasis (p=0.0344, p=0.027). The 10 cases with S100A4-negative/Ecadherin-positive cancers showed a significantly better prognosis than the others (p<0.05). The histological grade (p=0.004), nodal status (p<0.0001) and S100A4-positive status (p=0.048) were highly significant independent prognostic predictors (p<0.05). These results suggest that S100A4 overexpression combined with reduced E-cadherin expression play important roles in tumor progression and metastasis in pancreatic cancer. The combined examination of these two molecules is useful in evaluating the outcome of pancreatic cancer patient.
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