Malignant effusions contain lysophosphatidic acid (LPA)-like activity.
Journal: 1998/September - Annals of Oncology
ISSN: 0923-7534
PUBMED: 9636836
Abstract:
BACKGROUND
Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) and sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) are bioactive phospholipids with mitogenic and growth factor-like activities that act via specific cell-surface receptors present in many normal and transformed cell types. LPA has recently been implicated as a growth factor present in ascites of ovarian cancer patients. The presence of LPA-like activity and the hypothesis that levels of this bioactivity in effusions of ovarian cancer patients are higher than those in effusions of other cancer patients was studied.
METHODS
A neurite retraction bioassay in a neuroblastoma cell line previously developed for in vitro detection of LPA activity on cell lines was employed and bioactivity was expressed in virtual LPA-equivalent levels. LPA-equivalent levels were tested in effusions of 62 patients with a range of malignancies, including 13 ovarian cancer patients. Biochemical and clinical parameters were evaluated for correlations with LPA-equivalent levels.
RESULTS
Average LPA-equivalent levels were 50.2 microns (range 5.4-200) for all patients, and 94.5 microns (range 15-200) for ovarian cancer patients (P = 0.004). There were no additional independent significant correlations between LPA-equivalent levels in effusions and a range of other biochemical and clinical characteristics.
CONCLUSIONS
These data suggest a role for LPA-like lipids in the peritoneal spread of ovarian cancer and possibly that of other predominantly intraperitoneal malignancies.
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