Gender dimorphism and age of onset in malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor preclinical models and human patients Journal Article


Authors: Shurell, E.; Tran, L. M.; Nakashima, J.; Smith, K. B.; Tam, B. M.; Li, Y.; Dry, S. M.; Federman, N.; Tap, W. D.; Wu, H.; Eilber, F. C.
Article Title: Gender dimorphism and age of onset in malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor preclinical models and human patients
Abstract: Background: Gender-based differences in disease onset in murine models of malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST) and in patients with Neurofibromatosis type-1-(NF-1)-associated or spontaneous MPNST has not been well studied. Methods: Forty-three mGFAP-Cre+;Pten(loxp/+);LSL-K-ras(G12D/+) mice were observed for tumor development and evaluated for gender disparity in age of MPNST onset. Patient data from the prospectively collected UCLA sarcoma database (1974-2011, n = 113 MPNST patients) and 39 published studies on MPNST patients (n = 916) were analyzed for age of onset differences between sexes and between NF-1 and spontaneous MPNST patients. Results: Our murine model showed gender-based differences in MPNST onset, with males developing MPNST significantly earlier than females (142 vs. 162 days, p = 0.015). In the UCLA patient population, males also developed MPNST earlier than females (median age 35 vs. 39.5 years, p = 0.048). Patients with NF-1-associated MPNST had significantly earlier age of onset compared to spontaneous MPNST (median age 33 vs. 39 years, p = 0.007). However, expanded analysis of 916 published MPNST cases revealed no significant age difference in MPNST onset between males and females. Similar to the UCLA dataset, patients with NF-1 developed MPNST at a significantly younger age than spontaneous MPNST patients (p < 0.0001, median age 28 vs. 41 years) and this disparity was maintained across North American, European, and Asian populations. Conclusions: Although our preclinical model and single-institution patient cohort show gender dimorphism in MPNST onset, no significant gender disparity was detected in the larger MPNST patient meta-dataset. NF-1 patients develop MPNST 13 years earlier than patients with spontaneous MPNST, with little geographical variance.
Keywords: survival; cancer incidence; neurofibromatosis; experience; epidemiology; mpnst; meta-analysis; steroid-hormones; relevant; nf1; neurofibromatosis type-1; clinically; schwann-cells; von recklinghausens disease; neurogenic sarcomas
Journal Title: BMC Cancer
Volume: 14
ISSN: 1471-2407
Publisher: Biomed Central Ltd  
Date Published: 2014-11-15
Start Page: 827
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000345114600001
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-14-827
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC4237782
PUBMED: 25398666
Notes: Article -- 827 -- Source: Wos
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  1. William Douglas Tap
    372 Tap