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Loss of DUSP2 predicts a poor prognosis in patients with bladder cancer.

Human Pathology 2018 November 18
Dual-specificity phosphatase 2 (DUSP2), a member of nuclear type I DUSP family, abolishes the activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs) and plays critical roles in the immune processes, inflammatory responses and cancer progression. Currently, whether DUSP2 is involved in pathogenesis of bladder cancer remains unclear. In this study, we demonstrate that the expression level of DUSP2 was predominantly down-regulated in bladder cancer tissues and cell lines as compared with that of paired normal tissues and benign urothelial cells. Besides, the expression of DUSP2 was significantly associated with pathological grade (P=.009), AJCC stage (P=.017) and subtype (P=.001) in the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) cohort and mainly related to TNM stage (P=.016) in the tissue-microarray (TMA) cohort. Kaplan-Meier analysis suggested that patients with low DUSP2 expression had a shorter 5-years overall survival (P=.018 in TCGA; P=.012 in TMA) and lower recurrence-free survival (P=.008). Cox regression analysis indicated that reduced DUSP2 was an independent high risk factor for survival prognosis in both cohorts. Taken together, our findings for the first time suggested that DUSP2 as a progression and prognosis biomarker for bladder cancer. Whether DUSP2 functions as a tumor suppressor in bladder cancer deserves further studies.

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