Emerging Prognostic and Predictive Significance of Stress Keratin 17 in HPV-Associated and Non HPV-Associated Human Cancers: A Scoping Review

Taja Ložar & Evie H. Carchman et al. · 2023-11-25

4Citations

A growing body of literature suggests that the expression of cytokeratin 17 (K17) correlates with inferior clinical outcomes across various cancer types. In this scoping review, we aimed to review and map the available clinical evidence of the prognostic and predictive value of K17 in human cancers. PubMed, Web of Science, Embase (via Scopus), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Google Scholar were searched for studies of K17 expression in human cancers. Eligible studies were peer-reviewed, published in English, presented original data, and directly evaluated the association between K17 and clinical outcomes in human cancers. Of the 1705 studies identified in our search, 58 studies met criteria for inclusion. Studies assessed the prognostic significance (n = 54), predictive significance (n = 2), or both the prognostic and predictive significance (n = 2). Altogether, 11 studies (19.0%) investigated the clinical relevance of K17 in cancers with a known etiologic association to HPV; of those, 8 (13.8%) were focused on head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), and 3 (5.1%) were focused on cervical squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). To date, HNSCC, as well as triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) and pancreatic cancer, were the most frequently studied cancer types. K17 had prognostic significance in 16/17 investigated cancer types and 43/56 studies. Our analysis suggests that K17 is a negative prognostic factor in the majority of studied cancer types, including HPV-associated types such as HNSCC and cervical cancer (13/17), and a positive prognostic factor in 2/17 studied cancer types (urothelial carcinoma of the upper urinary tract and breast cancer). In three out of four predictive studies, K17 was a negative predictive factor for chemotherapy and immune checkpoint blockade therapy response.

Journal
Viruses
TL;DR

The analysis suggests that K17 is a negative prognostic factor in the majority of studied cancer types, including HPV-associated types such as HNSCC and cervical cancer, and a positive prognostic factors in 2/17 studiedcancer types (urothelial carcinoma of the upper urinary tract and breast cancer).

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Funding
Yale Head and Neck Cancer SPORE: Overcoming Treatment Resistance in Head and Neck CancerYale Clinical and Translational Science AwardProtocol Review and Monitoring SystemCore C - Virus/VectorProject 1: Priming and propagating immunity against head and neck cancer using targeted radionuclide therapyProject 1: Priming and propagating immunity against head and neck cancer using targeted radionuclide therapyDefining Drivers of HPV-associated CarcinogenesisCore C - Virus/VectorCore C - Virus/VectorDefining Drivers of HPV-associated CarcinogenesisUW Comprehensive Cancer Center SupportMouse Model of Human Papillomavirus PathogenesisMouse Model of Human Papillomavirus PathogenesisCore C - Virus/VectorDefining Drivers of HPV-associated CarcinogenesisMouse Model of Human Papillomavirus PathogenesisProtocol Review and Monitoring SystemProject 1: Priming and propagating immunity against head and neck cancer using targeted radionuclide therapyYale Head and Neck Cancer SPORE: Overcoming Treatment Resistance in Head and Neck Cancer

NIDCR NIH HHS

P50 DE030707

NCATS NIH HHS

UL1 TR001863

NIH HHS

P30CA014520-49

NIH HHS

P01 CA022443

NIH HHS

P50 CA278595

NCI NIH HHS

P50 CA278595

NCI NIH HHS

R35 CA210807

NCI NIH HHS

P01 CA022443

NIH HHS

CA022443

NIH HHS

R35 CA210807

NCI NIH HHS

P30 CA014520

NIH HHS

R01 CA228543

NCI NIH HHS

R01 CA228543

National Institutes of Health

P01 CA022443

National Institutes of Health

R35 CA210807

National Institutes of Health

R01 CA228543

National Institutes of Health

P30CA014520-49

National Institutes of Health

P50 CA278595

National Institutes of Health

P50DE030707