Oncotarget

Meta-Analysis:

Significance of Ki-67 in non-muscle invasive bladder cancer patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis

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Oncotarget. 2017; 8:100614-100630. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.21899

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Kyungtae Ko _, Chang Wook Jeong, Cheol Kwak, Hyeon Hoe Kim and Ja Hyeon Ku

Abstract

Kyungtae Ko1, Chang Wook Jeong2, Cheol Kwak2, Hyeon Hoe Kim2 and Ja Hyeon Ku2

1Department of Urology, Kandong Sacred Heart Hospital, Hallym University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea

2Department of Urology, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, Korea

Correspondence to:

Ja Hyeon Ku, email: [email protected]

Keywords: bladder cancer, urothelial carcinoma, Ki-67, prognosis, meta-analysis

Received: August 13, 2017     Accepted: September 23, 2017     Published: October 13, 2017

ABSTRACT

Purpose: This meta-analysis evaluated the prognostic significance of Ki-67 in non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC).

Materials and Methods: We selected 39 articles including 5,229 patients from Embase, Scopus, and PubMed searches. The primary outcomes, recurrence-free survival (RFS), progression-free survival (PFS), disease-specific survival (DSS), and overall survival (OS) were determined using time-to event hazard ratios (HRs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Study heterogeneity was tested by chi-square and I2 statistics. Heterogeneity sources were identified by subgroup meta-regression analysis.

Results: Two studies were prospective; 37 were retrospective. Immunohistochemistry was performed in tissue microarrays or serial sections. A wide range of antibody dilutions and Ki-67 positivity thresholds were used. Study heterogeneity was attributed to analysis results in studies of RFS (p < 0.0001). Meta-regression analysis revealed that region and analysis results accounted for heterogeneity in PFS studies (p = 0.00471, p < 0.0001). High Ki-67 expression was associated with poor RFS (pooled HR, 1.78; 95% CI, 1.48–2.15), poor PFS (pooled HR, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.13–2.15), poor DSS (pooled HR, 2.24; 95% CI, 1.47–2.15), and worse OS (pooled HR, 2.29; 95% CI, 1.24–4.22).

Conclusions: The meta-analysis found that current evidence supports the prognostic value of Ki-67 in NMIBC patients.


INTRODUCTION

Bladder cancer is the ninth most common cancer worldwide. Approximately 430,000 patients are diagnosed and 165,000 patients die from it annually [1]. Approximately 25% of newly diagnosed cases are muscle invasive bladder cancer (MIBC, ≥ T2), and radical cystectomy is the standard treatment. Other non-muscle invasive bladder cancers (NMIBCs) include stage Ta noninvasive papillary carcinomas and stage T1 tumors that invade the subepithelial connective tissue. The gold standard treatment of NMIBC is transurethral resection of bladder tumor (TURBT) and intravesical Bacillus Calmette–Guérin (BCG) installation. However, 30%–70% of patients experience a recurrence after initial treatment, and 25%–60% progress to MIBC.

As the incidence and survival of bladder cancer increase, the importance of treatment follow-up and predicting the risk of recurrence and progression of individual patients also increases. The outcome of T1 bladder cancer can range from no recurrence to rapid progression to MIBC and metastasis. As progression has a poor prognosis, it is important to distinguish patients who would benefit from early cystectomy and those best managed by bladder-preserving treatments. Currently, such group assignment is challenging. The use of clinical and pathological variables, such as tumor size and number and presence of a carcinoma in situ (CIS), to estimate MIBC progression risk has been evaluated [2], but it is difficult to estimate individual prognosis. Characterizing bladder cancer as low or high grade using two-tier criteria of the European Treatment Guidelines or the 2004 World Health Organization classification is difficult, and distinguishing Ta and T1 bladder cancer is problematic because of interobserver error [3]. Tumor markers, such as bcl-2, p53, Ki67, and CK20, are currently under study, but none are in routine clinical use at this time.

Ki-67 is a nuclear protein that is associated with ribosomal RNA transcription and is a marker of cellular proliferation [4]. It is strongly expressed in the growth fraction of cancer cells, and the presence of Ki-67-positive tumor cells indicates a poor survival and recurrence prognosis in prostate and breast cancer and nephroblastoma [5]. Ki-67 has not been confirmed as a poor prognosis marker in NMIBC patients because the reported thresholds of positivity and the immunochemical staining methods vary, making direct comparisons difficult [6]. An expert consensus panel has found that markers, such as Ki-67 and p53, can predict the recurrence and progression of bladder cancer, but the inconsistency of available data indicates their unreliability [7]. This meta-analysis was conducted to increase our understanding of the prognostic significance of Ki-67 in NMIBC patients.

RESULTS

Study characteristics

The characteristics of the 39 selected studies are described in Tables 13. They were published between 1997 and 2015, 17 were conducted in Asian countries, 17 were conducted in Europe, and five were conducted in America. All but two studies were retrospective, 19 included < 100 patients, 20 included ≥ 100 patients, follow-up ranged from 1 to 267 months, and five studies did not report the duration of follow-up.

Table 1: Main characteristics of the eligible studies

Study

Year

Country

Recruit period

Study design

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Consecutive patients

Definition of outcome

Asakura [20]

1997

Japan

1984–1993

Retrospective

Yes

NA

No

Lee [21]

1997

Korea

1988–1993

Retrospective

Yes

NA

No

Pfister [22]

1999

Canada

1990–1992

Retrospective

Yes

NA

No

Tomobe [23]

1999

Japan

1989–1994

Retrospective

No

NA

No

Wu [24]

2000

Taiwan

1990–1997

Retrospective

Yes

NA

No

Blanchet [25]

2001

France

1989–1990

Prospective

No

Yes

Yes

Kamai [26]

2001

Japan

1987–1997

Retrospective

No

Yes

No

Kilicli-Camur [27]

2002

Turkey

NA

Retrospective

No

NA

Yes

Sgambato [28]

2002

Italy

1990–1995

Retrospective

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yan [29]

2002

USA

1994–1999

Retrospective

Yes

Yes

No

Dybowski [30]

2003

Poland

1994–1995

Retrospective

Yes

NA

No

Santos [31]

2003

Portugal

1989–1996

Retrospective

Yes

Yes

Yes

Su [32]

2003

Japan

NA

Retrospective

No

NA

Yes

Mhawech [33]

2004

Switzerland

1997–2000

Retrospective

Yes

NA

Yes

Krüger [34]

2005

Germany

1987–1999

Retrospective

Yes

Yes

Yes

Theodoropoulos [35]

2005

Greece

1993–2003

Retrospective

Yes

No

Yes

Gonzalez-Campora [36]

2006

Spain

1991–1997

Retrospective

No

Yes

Yes

Quintero [37]

2006

Spain

1990–1994

Retrospective

No

Yes

Yes

Yin [38]

2006

China

NA

Retrospective

No

Yes

No

Maeng [39]

2010

Korea

2001–2007

Retrospective

No

NA

No

Miyake [40]

2010

Japan

2000–2005

Retrospective

No

Yes

No

Seo [41]

2010

Korea

2001–2007

Retrospective

Yes

NA

Yes

van Rhijn [10]

2010

Netherlands

NA

Retrospective

No

NA

Yes

Behnsawy [42]

2011

Japan

2000–2007

Retrospective

No

Yes

No

Wosnitzer [43]

2011

USA

NA

Retrospective

No

NA

No

Acikalin [6]

2012

Turkey

1996–2007

Retrospective

No

NA

Yes

Chen [11]

2012

China

NA

Retrospective

No

NA

Yes

Ogata [44]

2012

Brazil

2005–2010

Retrospective

Yes

NA

No

Oderda [45]

2013

Italy

1994–2004

Prospective

No

NA

Yes

Okazoe [46]

2013

Japan

2006–2009

Retrospective

No

NA

No

Park [47]

2013

Korea

1990–2007

Retrospective

No

NA

Yes

Ruan [48]

2013

China

2007–2010

Retrospective

Yes

NA

No

Ben Abdelkrim [14]

2014

Tunisia

2001–2003

Retrospective

No

NA

Yes

Bertz [18]

2014

Germany

1989–2006

Retrospective

No

NA

No

Ding [15]

2014

China

2000–2010

Retrospective

No

NA

Yes

Mangrud [49]

2014

Norway

2002–2006

Retrospective

Yes

Yes

Yes

Pan [50]

2014

Taiwan

1991–2005

Retrospective

No

NA

Yes

Özyalvaçli [16]

2015

Turkey

2005–2013

Retrospective

No

Yes

Yes

Poyet [17]

2015

Switzerland

1990–2006

Retrospective

No

Yes

Yes

NA: not available.

Table 2: Patient characteristics of the eligible studies

Study

No. of patients

Median age, range (years)

Gender (male/female)

Intravesical therapy (no.)

Median follow-up, range (months)

Asakura [20]

104

63 (mean), 28–90

78/26

Chemotherapy (6)

42 (mean), 3–134

Lee [21]

32

NA, 30–81

28/4

BCG (32)

NA

Pfister [22]

244

65.1 (mean), NA

NA

No

47 (mean), NA

Tomobe [23]

50

63.9 (mean), 22–88

43/7

Chemotherapy or BCG (32)

44 (mean), 5–80

Wu [24]

86

NA

NA

NA

NA

Blanchet [25]

70

62.6 (mean), 21–84

66/4

BCG (57)

64, 12–111

Kamai [26]

86

NA

NA

MMC, doxorubicin or BCG (NA)

50, 3–124

Kilicli-Camur [27]

118

60.2 (mean), 29–86

NA

NA

31.4 (mean), 24–60

Sgambato [28]

96

68 (mean), 29–92

83/13

BCG (NA)

50 (mean), 24–102

Yan [29]

270

71 (mean), NA

196/71, unknown (3)

BCG (66)

19, (1–54)

Dybowski [30]

45

NA

NA

NA

64, 1–82

Santos [31]

159

66, 21–88

115/44

Chemotherapy (65), BCG (17)

46.5, 4–123

Su [32]

79

64, 34–91

66/13

MMC or Adriamycin (74)

48.7 (mean), 4–78

Mhawech [33]

49

70.3 (mean), 52–90

44/5

BCG (7)

12, 3–77

Krüger [34]

73

68, NA

60/13

BCG (73)

NA

Theodoropoulos [35]

140

69, 23–89

107/33

Epirubicin or BCG (114)

41, 8–131

Gonzalez-Campora [36]

147

66 (mean), 30–95

127/20

BCG (NA)

75 (mean), 5–12 yr

Quintero [37]

164

61 (mean), 29–93

143/21

BCG (NA)

75, 60–144

Yin [38]

101

NA

81/20

BCG (101)

54, 20–68.6 (10–90% percentiles)

Maeng [39]

55

67 (mean), 33–84

40/15

NA

26.2 (mean), 3–70

Miyake [40]

109

68.5 (mea), 36–94

19/14

Anthracycline (16), doxorubicin (1), epirubicin (13), pirarubicin (2), BCG (19)

48, 1–99

Seo [41]

129

64.2 (38–88)

104/25

MMC (129)

48.6 (mean), 6.1–96

van Rhijn [10]

230

65.1 (mean), NA

175/55

NA

8.6 yr, 6.6–11.3 yr (IQR)

Behnsawy [42]

161

NA

137/24

Unknown regimen (49)

47, 13–93

Wosnitzer [43]

32

70.3, 44–89

25/7

Docetaxel (17), nanoparticle albumin-bound docetaxel (15)

22, 11–75

Acikalin [6]

68

63, 35–85

66/2

NA

51, 12–132

Chen [11]

72

61.3 (mean), 27–87

58/14

MMC, epirubicin, pirarubicin (NA)

63.4 (mean), 16–93

Ogata [44]

43

70, 39–85

35/8

NA

NA, 12–71

Oderda [45]

192

73.2 (mean), NA

166/26

BCG (192)

100, 2–229

Okazoe [46]

71

72, 41–95

59/12

Unknown regimen (31)

9.8, 1.0–51.8

Park [47]

70

66, 31–85

53/8

BCG (70)

60, 6–217

Ruan [48]

126

64.5 (mean), 29–90

103/23

NA

NA

Ben Abdelkrim [14]

71

63.1 (mean), 39–88

67/4

NA

28, 3–77

Bertz [18]

309

71.7, 38–87

237/72

BCG (309)

49, 5–172

Ding [15]

332

67, 21–92

273/59

NA

47, 2–124

Mangrud [49]

193

74, 39–95

148/45

BCG (NA)

75, 1–127

Pan [50]

605

71 (mean), 23–92

511/94

MMC (272), doxorubicin (67), epirubicin (130), BCG (132)

NA

Özyalvaçli [16]

90

NA

83/7

NA

32.8, 36.2–103.6 (IQR)

Poyet [17]

158

69.5, 32–92

131/43

NA

110.6, 32.4–266.8

NA: not available, BCG: bacille Calmette-Guérin, MMC: mitomycin C, IQR: interquartile range.

Table 3: Tumor characteristics of the eligible studies

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*Grading according to the 2004 WHO classification system: papillary urothelial neoplasm of low malignant potential, low grade and high grade.

CIS: carcinoma in situ, NA: not available.

Immunohistochemistry

Immunohistochemistry (IHC) was performed using tissue microarrays of 1–2 mm diameter samples of representative tissues and using slide mounted serial tissue sections in the other 34 studies. Fifteen of the 39 studies evaluated IHC staining in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue blocks, but did not identify the primary antibody used, and a wide range of antibody dilutions was reported (1/20 to 1/200). In 33 studies, immunopositivity was defined by the presence of nuclear staining, but the cutoff percentage for positive or negative expression (% IHC cutoff) and the reported percentage of Ki-67-positive cells varied widely among studies. Twenty studies reported blinded evaluation of Ki-67 expression (Table 4).

Table 4: Immunohistochemical analysis of the eligible studies

Study

Tissue section

Primary antibody

Dilution

Compartment

Definition of ki-67 index

% IHC cut-off

% ki-67 positive

Interpretation

Asakura [20]

All specimens

NA

1:200

Nuclei

Yes

5.35

50

NA

Lee [21]

All specimens

NA

NA

Nuclei

Yes

16

50

Blind

Pfister [22]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:50

Nuclei

No

10

70

Blind

Tomobe [23]

All specimens

NA

1:200

Nuclei

Yes

15.5

50

NA

Wu [24]

All specimens

NA

1:100

Nuclei

Yes

10.9

50

Blind

Blanchet [25]

All specimens

Monoclonal

NA

NA

Yes

13

18.5

Blind

Kamai [26]

All specimens

Monoclonal

NA

Nuclei

Yes

30

18.6

NA

Kilicli-Camur [27]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:30

Nuclei

Yes

25

NA

NA

Sgambato [28]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:100

Nuclei

Yes

10

65.6

Blind

Yan [29]

All specimens

NA

NA

Nuclei

No

25

34.2

NA

Dybowski [30]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:50

Nuclei

No

30

50

Blind

Santos [31]

All specimens

NA

1:50

Nuclei

Yes

18

50

NA

Su [32]

All specimens

NA

1:50

Nuclei

Yes

18

50

NA

Mhawech [33]

TM (1.6 mm core)

NA

1:50

Nuclei

Yes

NA

50

Blind

Krüger [34]

TM (2 × 2 mm)

Monoclonal

1:20

Nuclei

Yes

Continuous

-

Blind

Theodoropoulos [35]

All specimens

NA

Prediluted

Nuclei

Yes

8.6

50

Blind

Gonzalez-Campora [36]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:20

Nuclei

Yes

10

18.4

NA

Quintero [37]

All specimens

Monoclonal

Prediluted

Nuclei

Yes

13

10.4

NA

Yin [38]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:100

Nuclei

Yes

20

24.8

NA

Maeng [39]

All specimens

NA

1:80

Nuclei

Yes

25

36.4

NA

Miyake [40]

All specimens

Monoclonal

Prediluted

Nuclei

Yes

25

40.4

Blind

Seo [41]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:50

Nuclei

Yes

25

36.4

NA

van Rhijn [10]

All specimens

NA

NA

NA

NA

25

NA

Blind

Behnsawy [42]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:200

Nuclei

Yes

5

28.6

Blind

Wosnitzer [43]

All specimens

Monoclonal

NA

NA

Yes

10

50

Blind

Acikalin [6]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:50

Nuclei

Yes

10

69.1

Blind

Chen [11]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:50

Nuclei

Yes

25

47.2

NA

Ogata [44]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:100

NA

No

20

58.1

NA

Oderda [45]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:10

Nuclei

Yes

20

NA

NA

Okazoe [46]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:100

Nuclei

Yes

18

29.6

Blind

Park [47]

TM (1 mm core)

Monoclonal

1:200

Nuclei

Yes

10.4

40

Blind

Ruan [48]

All specimens

Polyclonal

1:50

Nuclei

Yes

10

55.6

Blind

Ben Abdelkrim [14]

All specimens

NA

1:50

Nuclei

Yes

10

38

Blind

Bertz [18]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:50

Nuclei

Yes

15

64.4

NA

Ding [15]

All specimens

Monoclonal

1:100

Nuclei

No

25

32.5

NA

Mangrud [49]

All specimens

NA

NA

NA

Yes

39

25

NA

Pan [50]

TM (2 mm core)

NA

1:100

Nuclei

Yes

20/80

NA

Blind

Özyalvaçli [16]

All specimens

Monoclonal

NA

Nuclei

Yes

10

27.8

Blind

Poyet [17]

TM (1 mm core)

NA

1:50

NA

Yes

10

38.4

NA

IHC: immunohistochemistry, NA: not available, TM: tissue microarray.

Study outcomes

Of the 39 studies, the association of Ki-67 expression with recurrence-free survival (RFS) was reported in 34 (4,581 patients), with progression-free survival (PFS) in 21 (3,400 patients), with disease-specific survival (DSS) in six (1,505 patients), and with overall survival (OS) in two (356 patients) studies (Tables 58). The most common cofactors included in the multivariate analysis of the risk of outcome were grade and T stage. Forest plots of the hazard ratios (HRs) reported in individual studies and those from the meta-analysis are shown in Figure 1. Despite the use of strict inclusion criteria, between-study heterogeneity was detected in the effect of Ki-67 expression on RFS and PFS, with p <0.05 and I2 ≥ 50%.

Table 5: Estimation of the hazard ratio for recurrence-free survival

Study

Analysis

HR estimation

Co-factors

Analysis results

Asakura [20]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, grade, multiplicity, size

Significant

Lee [21]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

P53, bcl-2, cathepsin-D

Not significant

Pfister [22]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, grade, multiplicity, size, p53, MDM2, p21

Not significant

Tomobe [23]

Multivariate

HR, p value

T stage, grade, multiplicity, size, recurrence history, whole NOR, proliferating NOR, resting NOR

Not significant

Wu [24]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, grade, p53, bcl-2

Significant

Blanchet [25]

Univariate

Event no., P value

-

Not significant

Kamai [26]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Grade, p27, cyclin E

Significant

Kilicli-Camur [27]

Univariate

Event no., P value

-

Significant

Sgambato [28]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, T stage, grade, p27, cyclin D1

Significant

Yan [29]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, p53

Not significant

Dybowski [30]

Univariate

Event no., P value

-

Significant

Santos [31]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, grade, multiplicity, BCG, p53

Significant

Su [32]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, tumor architecture, p53, c-erbB-2

Significant

Krüger [34]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Grade, p53

Not significant

Theodoropoulos [35]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, grade, apoptotic index, p53, bcl-2, VEGF, MVD, HIF-1α

Significant

Quintero [37]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Size

Significant

Maeng [39]

Univariate

HR, 95% CI

-

Significant

Miyake [40]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Grade, p53, HO-1

Significant

Seo [41]

Univariate

HR, 95% CI

-

Not significant

van Rhijn [10]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, sex, hospital, T stage, grade, concomitant CIS, multiplicity, size, EORTC risk score, FGFR3

Not significant

Behnsawy [42]

Univariate

HR, 95% CI

-

Not significant

Wosnitzer [43]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, sex, T stage, concomitant CIS, p53, stathmin, tau

Not significant

Acikalin [6]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, grade, size, multiplicity, mapsin

Not significant

Chen [11]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, sex, T stage, grade, multiplicity, size, intravesical instillation, VEGF

Significant

Ogata [44]

Univariate

Event no., P value

-

Significant

Oderda [45]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, T stage, grade, ,multiplicity, size, p53

Not significant

Okazoe [46]

Univariate

HR, 95% CI

-

Not significant

Park [47]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

p53, pRb, PTEN, p27, FGFR3, CD9

Not significant

Ruan [48]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, sex, grade, multiplicity, size, Sox2

Significant

Ben Abdelkrim [14]

Univariate

Event no., P value

-

Significant

Bertz [18]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, sex, grade, concomitant CIS, tumor architecture, p53, CK20

Not significant

Ding [15]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, grade, concomitan CIS, multiplicity, size

Significant

Pan [50]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, grade, multiplicity, size, intravesical instillation, p53, HSP27, COX2, cyclin D1, p16, pRb, p27, p21, EGFR, E-cadherin, EpCam, no. of altered markers

Significant

Özyalvaçli [16]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, smoking, size, P16d

Not significant

HR: hazard ratio, CI: confidence interval, NOR: nucleolar organizer regions, BCG: bacille Calmette-Guérin, VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor, MVD, microvessel density, HIF: hypoxia-inducible factor, CIS: carcinoma in situ, EORTC: European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer, EGFR: epithelial growth factor receptor.

Table 6: Estimation of the hazard ratio for progression-free survival

Study

Analysis

HR estimation

Co-factors

Analysis results

Blanchet [25]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T state, grade, concomitant CIS, multiplicity, size

Significant

Kilicli-Camur [27]

Univariate

Event no., P value

-

Significant

Santos [31]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, grade, multiplicity. BCG, p53

Significant

Mhawech [33]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

P53, p21, cyclin D1, p27, p16

Not significant

Krüger [34]

Univariate

HR, 95% CI

-

Not significant

Gonzalez-Campora [36]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

NA

Significant

Quintero [37]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

None

Significant

Yin [38]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, T stage, grade, BIRC5-cytoplasmic labeling index, , BIRC5-nuclear labeling index

Not significant

Seo [41]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, grade, tumor architecture, lymphovascular invasion

Significant

van Rhijn [10]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, sex, hospital, T stage, grade, concomitant CIS, multiplicity, size, EORTC risk score, FGFR3

Not significant

Acikalin [6]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, grade, size, multiplicity, mapsin

Not significant

Chen [11]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, sex, T stage, grade, multiplicity, size, intravesical instillation, VEGF

Significant

Oderda [45]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, T stage, grade, ,multiplicity, size, p53

Not significant

Park [47]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

p53, pRb, PTEN, p27, FGFR3, CD9

Not significant

Ben Abdelkrim [14]

Univariate

Event no., P value

-

Not significant

Bertz [18]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, sex, grade, concomitant CIS, tumor architecture, p53, CK20

Significant

Ding [15]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, grade, concomitan CIS, multiplicity, size

Significant

Mangrud [49]

Univariate

HR, 95% CI

-

Significant

Pan [50]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, grade, multiplicity, size, intravesical instillation, p53, HSP27, COX2, cyclin D1, p16, pRb, p27, p21, EGFR, E-cadherin, EpCam, no. of altered markers

Significant

Özyalvaçli [16]

Univariate

Event no., P value

-

Not significant

Poyet [17]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Grade, tumor architecture, Cx43

Not significant

HR: hazard ratio, CI: confidence interval, CIS: carcinoma in situ, BCG: bacille Calmette-Guérin, NA: not available, EORTC: European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer, VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor, EGFR: epithelial growth factor receptor.

Table 7: Estimation of the hazard ratio for disease-specific survival

Study

Analysis

HR estimation

Co-factors

Analysis results

Yin [38]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, T stage, grade, BIRC5-cytoplasmic labeling index, , BIRC5-nuclear labeling index

Not significant

van Rhijn [10]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, sex, hospital, T stage, grade, concomitant CIS, multiplicity, size, EORTC risk score, FGFR3

Not significant

Acikalin [6]

Univariate

Event no., P value

-

Not significant

Oderda [45]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, T stage, grade, ,multiplicity, size, p53

Not significant

Bertz [18]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, sex, grade, concomitant CIS, tumor architecture, p53, CK20

Significant

Pan [50]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

T stage, grade, multiplicity, size, intravesical instillation, p53, HSP27, COX2, cyclin D1, p16, pRb, p27, p21, EGFR, E-cadherin, EpCam, no. of altered markers

Significant

HR: hazard ratio, CI: confidence interval, CIS: carcinoma in situ, EORTC: European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer, EGFR: epithelial growth factor receptor.

Table 8: Estimation of the hazard ratio for overall survival

Study

Analysis

HR estimation

Co-factors

Analysis results

Quintero [37]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Size, p27

Significant

Oderda [45]

Multivariate

HR, 95% CI

Age, T stage, grade, ,multiplicity, size, p53

Significant

HR: hazard ratio, CI: confidence interval.

Forest

Figure 1: Forest plots of the hazard ratios. High Ki-67 expression indicated poor bladder cancer prognosis. (A) Recurrence-free survival, (B) progression-free survival, (C) disease-specific survival, (D) overall survival. Between-study heterogeneity was detected in the effect of Ki-67 expression on RFS and PFS.

RFS

Overall, the pooled HR for RFS in 34 studies was 1.78 (95% CI, 1.48–2.15), suggesting that high Ki-67 expression indicated poor bladder cancer prognosis. However, significant heterogeneity was observed in the studies (I2 = 80%, p < 0.00001) (Figure 1A). Subgroup meta-regression by publication year, region, number of patients, HR estimation, and analysis results identified analysis results as the only possible explanation for heterogeneity (p < 0.0001, Table 9). The other variables in the subgroup analyses did not include any heterogeneity of data.

Table 9: Subgroup analysis for recurrence-free survival

No. of included articles

No. of cases

Pooled HR (95% CI)

Chi2 (p value)

I2

Ph*

Publication year

0.1633

 1997–2009

16

1,816

2.05 (1.52–2.76)

92.96 (< 0.00001)

84%

 2010–2015

18

2,765

1.58 (1.26–1.96)

37.18 (0.003)

54%

Region

0.7686

 Asia

16

2,167

1.66 (1.29–2.13)

33.06 (0.005)

55%

 Europe

14

1,825

1.91 (1.41–2.58)

76.87 (< 0.00001)

83%

 America

4

589

1.81 (1.04–3.15)

9.93 (0.02)

70%

No. of patients

0.3895

 < 100

18

1,189

1.95 (1.44–2.65)

69.11 (< 0.00001)

75%

 ≥ 100

16

3,392

1.66 (1.36–2.03)

37.44 (0.001)

60%

HR estimation

0.5542

 Univariate

9

763

1.99 (1.30–3.05)

29.03 (0.0003)

72%

 Multivariate

25

3,818

1.72 (1.40–2.12)

111.81 (< 0.00001)

79%

Analysis results

< 0.0001

 Not significant

16

2,091

1.22 (1.05–1.43)

22.48 (0.10)

33%

 Significant

18

2,490

2.28 (1.93–2.70)

22.27 (0.17)

24%

HR: hazard ratio, CI: confidence interval.

Ph* for heterogeneity between subgroups with meta-regression analysis.

PFS

A meta-analysis of 21 studies found that high Ki-67 expression was significantly associated with poor PFS (pooled HR, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.13–1.44). However, the Cochrane Q test (p < 0.00001) and an I2 = 75% could not exclude significant heterogeneity (Figure 1B). Meta-regression analysis revealed that region accounted for part of the study heterogeneity for PFS (p = 0.00471, Table 10). In addition, analysis results was found to significantly affect the relationship between Ki-67 expression and PFS (p < 0.0001). Other variables included in this subgroup analysis did not include any heterogeneity of data.

Table 10: Subgroup analysis for progression-free survival

No. of included articles

No. of cases

Pooled HR (95% CI)

Chi2 (p value)

I2

Ph*

Publication year

0.1633

 1997–2009

8

881

1.08 (0.97–1.19)

37.11 (< 0.00001)

81%

 2010–2015

13

2,519

2.11 (1.62–2.75)

11.71 (0.47)

0%

Region

0.0471

 Asia

6

1,309

2.16 (1.19–3.93)

8.96 (0.11)

44%

 Europe

15

2,091

1.17 (1.05–1.30)

55.75 (< 0.00001)

75%

No. of patients

0.2529

 < 100

8

563

1.53 (0.91–2.59)

18.15 (0.01)

61%

 ≥ 100

13

2,837

2.26 (1.50–3.43)

54.85 (< 0.00001)

78%

HR estimation

0.418

 Univariate

5

545

1.61 (0.97–2.69)

10.50 (0.03)

62%

 Multivariate

16

2,855

2.11 (1.41–3.15)

62.59 (< 0.00001)

76%

Analysis results

< 0.0001

 Not significant

10

1,102

1.00 (0.98–1.02)

7.10 (0.63)

0%

 Significant

11

2,298

3.02 (1769–5.21)

66.75 (< 0.00001)

85%

HR: hazard ratio, CI: confidence interval, NMIBC: non-muscle invasive bladder cancer.

Ph* for heterogeneity between subgroups with meta-regression analysis.

DSS

A meta-analysis of six studies found that high Ki-67 expression was significantly associated with poor DSS (pooled HR, 2.24; 95% CI, 1.47–3.39). No significant study heterogeneity was found (I2 = 0%, p = 0.73; Figure 1C).

OS

Meta-analysis of the two studies evaluating the association of ki-67 expression with OS found that a high Ki-67 expression predicted a worse outcome, with a pooled HR of 2.29 (95% CI, 1.24–4.22). Inter-study heterogeneity was not significant (I2 = 12%, p = 0.29) (Figure 1D).

Sensitivity analysis

One-way sensitivity analyses were conducted by stepwise exclusion of single studies and recalculating the pooled HR for the remaining studies. No significant differences were observed among the results obtained at each step of the analysis (data not shown), demonstrating that the overall results of the meta-analysis were statistically reliable.

Publication bias

Because fewer than 10 studies were included in meta-analyses of DSS and OS, it was not reasonable to estimate the potential for publication bias. No obvious asymmetry was evident in any of the funnel plots shown in Figure 2. The p-values of the Begg tests for RFS and PFS were > 0.05 (p = 0.4676 for RFS and 0.4324 for PFS), which confirmed the funnel plot symmetry and lack of evidence of publication bias.

Figure

Figure 2: Begg tests for (A) recurrence-free survival and (B) progression-free survival confirmed the funnel plot symmetry and lack of evidence of publication bias. Fewer than 10 studies were included in meta-analyses of (C) disease-specific survival and (D) overall survival.

DISCUSSION

About 75% of newly diagnosed bladder cancers are NMIBC localized in the subepithelial connective tissue [8]. After initial TURBT, NMIBC patients undergo cystoscopy every 3 months for the first year to monitor recurrence and progression. This protocol is painful and is also a financial burden; however, because progression to MIBC has a bad prognosis for the patients, ongoing cystoscopy and radiological evaluation are required. Early cystectomy for high risk T1 bladder cancer patients who are expected to progress is important because it can increase survival. On the other hand, radical cystectomy is a surgical procedure with many complications and requires use of urostomy bags or clean intermittent catheterizations, both of which have negative effects on daily activities. Efforts to distinguish candidates for early cystectomy or bladder preservation are complicated by the heterogeneous clinical behavior of bladder cancer.

Until recently, predicting the progression from NMIBC to MIBC has relied on clinicopathological variables, such as tumor size, grade, multiplicity, and diagnosis of CIS. However, even in cases of the same stage and grade of NMIBC, the clinical course can vary from no recurrence to rapid progression, making it difficult to predict the course. In addition, inter-pathologist variation in interpretation of TURBT specimens can occur because of malorientation, cautery artifacts, and other reasons. Given the current situation, reliable molecular markers would assist in making clinical decisions.

Previous studies of tumorigenesis indicated that changes at the molecular level precede changes in cellular morphology [9]. Changes in gene expression in multiple molecular pathways have been related to the development of bladder cancer. Ki-67 has been associated with expression of oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes, such as Connexin 43, Sox2, G protein-coupled receptor 87, heme oxygenase-1, p53, and p27 [17, 26, 37, 40, 46, 48]. IHC assays of proliferation markers, such as the Ki-67 and fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR)-3 are available in most pathology laboratories and have high reproducibility [10, 11]. IHC is currently used worldwide by over 90% of pathologists to diagnose bladder cancer, and Ki-67 is already used as a prognostic marker in over 84% of specimens in Europe [12]. Another advantage of this biologic marker is that objective measurements are possible and changes in expression can be compared after the therapeutic intervention.

Despite many advantages, biologic markers are not widely used to make clinical decisions because difficulties in making direct comparisons of study results have resulted in lack of consensus on their usefulness. In this meta-analysis, the overexpression threshold varied from 5% to 25% and the variation in positive Ki-67 expression was from 10% to 70 percent. Reasons for the inconsistency of previous study results include different follow-up protocols after TURBT, and differences in patient ethnicity, geography, tumor stage, tissue sectioning methods, and the primary antibodies and antibody dilutions used in each study [6]. The importance of these differences was apparent in the inter-study heterogeneity detected in the meta-analysis, with I2 values of 80% in RFS and 75% in PFS. To the best of our knowledge, this was the first meta-analysis of Ki-67 in bladder cancer. To determine the origins of the heterogeneity, we performed a meta-regression including publication year, region, HR estimation, and analysis results. Only analysis results were significantly associated with heterogeneity of studies reporting RFS. Although region might have accounted for part of the inter-study heterogeneity, analysis results was observed to significantly affect the relationship of Ki-67 expression and PFS.

As a proliferation-associated nuclear antigen, Ki-67 is expressed in all phases of the cell cycle except G0. The normal bladder uroephithelium has a very low proliferation rate [13], increased proliferation may signal recurrence rate, and high Ki-67 expression has a poor prognosis for patients with bladder cancer. Bladder tumors with Ki-67 expression have aggressive behaviors, such as multifocality, concomitant CIS, and increased EORCT risk scores, in addition to higher grade/stage [14, 15]. Because Ki-67 is a cellular proliferation marker, some studies claim that it is more closely related to the recurrence of NMIBC rather than progression to MIBC [14, 16]. Other studies reported that Ki-67 was related not only to recurrence but also to progression and survival [15, 17, 18]. Even though a consensus on the prognosis of Ki-67 expression has not been reached, this meta-analysis found that patients with high Ki-67 expression had significantly higher recurrence and progression rates than those with low expression. Even though the meta-analysis of DSS included only six studies and that of OS only two, patients with high Ki-67 expression had a significantly worse prognosis.

There were two notable study limitations. The first was study heterogeneity, which is common to meta-analyses of prognostic marker studies. Even though we applied strict inclusion and exclusion criteria to all study stages, and the selected studies included patient populations with similar T stage and grade, the variables evaluated study was different and diverse. Second, because of the strict selection criteria, we were not able to perform Begg tests as fewer than 10 studies were included in the DSS and OS meta-analysis. Consequently, while the analysis generated symmetrical inverted funnel plots, the results should be interpreted with care because of publication bias.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

This meta-analysis was performed following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines [19].

Search strategy

Embase, Scopus, and PubMed were searched for articles published in English to March 28, 2016 using the keywords “bladder cancer” and “Ki-67.” The titles and abstracts of the retrieved articles were reviewed independently by two authors (KK and CWJ) to minimize bias and to improve reliability. The reference lists of the retrieved articles were manually searched for potentially eligible studies that were not included in the initial database search. The full texts of the selected articles were independently screened by the same authors. Disagreements between the reviewers were resolved by consensus.

Study selection

The PRISMA flow chart of the systematic literature search and study selection is shown in Figure 3. The initial searches retrieved 1,959 articles. Of these, 1,059 were excluded as duplicate publications and an additional 575 were excluded after reviewing the abstracts. The full texts of the remaining 325 articles were reviewed, and an additional 286 articles that did not satisfy the inclusion criteria were excluded. A total of 39 articles including 5,229 patients, ranging from 32 to 605 per study were finally included in the analysis [6, 10, 11, 1418, 2050].

The

Figure 3: The PRISMA flow chart.

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Following the PRISMA guidelines, the study population, intervention, comparator, outcome, and study design (PICOS) were used to define study eligibility [19]. In this analysis, these were defined as Population, patients with NMIBC; Intervention: TURBT; Comparator, Ki-67 expression; Outcome, recurrence, progression, cancer-specific mortality, and any-cause mortality; Study design, univariate and/or multivariate Cox regression analysis. Strict, well-defined inclusion and exclusion criteria were intended to limit heterogeneity across studies and facilitate obtaining clinically meaningful results in this meta-analysis of prognostic marker studies [51]. The eligibility criteria were as follows: publication as an original article in English language; included human research subjects who were NMIBC patients and treated with TURBT; reported the histologic type as urothelial carcinoma (UC); evaluated Ki-67 expression in bladder cancer tissue by IHC; and investigated the association of Ki-67 expression level and survival outcomes. Eligible articles reported Kaplan–Meier/Cox regression-derived results of the prognostic value of Ki-67 on outcomes following the REporting recommendations for tumor MARKer prognostic studies (REMARK) guidelines for assessment of prognostic markers [52].

Studies were excluded if they were: letters, commentaries, case reports, reviews, or conference abstracts (because of limited data); studies conducted in animals or cell lines; studies using other than survival analyses.

If the same patient series was included in more than one publication, only the most informative or complete report was included to avoid duplication of the survival data. Two reviewers (CK and HHK) independently determined study eligibility. Discrepant opinions were resolved by discussion.

End points

The primary outcome measures were RFS, PFS, DSS, and OS. Survival was defined as the time from TURBT to the last follow-up. In the meta-analysis, recurrence was the development of histologically confirmed UC on follow-up after complete tumor resection. Disease-specific death was any death because of bladder cancer in patients with documented metastatic or recurrent disease. Compared with the primary tumor, progression was defined in individual studies as development of a higher stage [6, 14]; development of a higher stage and/or grade [27, 31]; development of a higher stage and/or grade as well as development of regional or distant metastases [25]; development of a higher stage or metastasis [10, 16, 17, 33, 36, 37, 41], or development of a higher stage and muscle invasive cancer (≥ T2), distant metastasis, or death from bladder cancer [11]. Additional definitions of progression included development of MIBC (≥ T2) [34, 45, 47] and development of MIBC (≥ T2) and/or metastasis [15, 49, 50].

Data extraction

Two reviewers (KK and JHK) extracted the study characteristics and outcome data, which were subsequently crosschecked to ensure their accuracy. Any discrepancies in extracting data were resolved by discussion. Authors of eligible studies were not contacted for additional data. The data retrieved following the REMARK guidelines were: the name of first author, country and year of publication, geographic location, study design, and recruitment period; the study population sample size, mean or median age, gender distribution, inclusion and exclusion criteria, treatment administered, endpoint definition, and follow-up period; tumor characteristics including stage, and grade; IHC data including cutoff value of positive expression, the antibodies used; adoption of a blinded evaluation method; and statistical data including survival curves, data including the total number of case and control participants, and HRs with confidence intervals (CIs). Discrepancies were resolved by discussion.

Statistical analysis

The meta-analysis was carried out with Review Manager software (RevMan 5; The Nordic Cochrane Center, The Cochrane Collaboration, Copenhagen, Denmark) and R 2.13.0 (R Development Core Team, Vienna, Austria, http://www.R-project.org).

Primary analysis

Study and pooled estimates were presented as forest plots. Survival outcome data were synthesized using the time-to-event HR as the operational measure. The method used to estimate the HR of each publication depended on the data provided. If HRs and the corresponding standard errors were not directly reported, then previously reported indirect methods were used to extract the logHR and variance because of the lack of previously published prognostic values [5355]. A DerSimonian and Laird random effects model was used to obtain the summary HRs and 95% CIs.

Assessment of heterogeneity

Heterogeneity of combined HRs was evaluated by the chi-square test and Higgins I-squared statistic. With the chi-square test, heterogeneity was significant when the p-value was < 0.05. I2 described the proportion of total variation in meta-analysis estimates that was caused by inter-study heterogeneity, rather than sampling error. It can take a value from 0% to 100%; increasing I2 values indicated increasing between-study heterogeneity. An I2 value above 50% was considered as having notable heterogeneity [56, 57], and if found, a subgroup meta-regression analysis was carried out to identify the source of the heterogeneity.

Publication bias

Publication bias was evaluated with funnel plots. In the absence of bias, the plots should resemble a symmetrical, inverted funnel and in the presence of bias, they should appear skewed and asymmetrical [57]. If more than 10 studies were included in the meta-analysis, then the Begg rank correlation test was also used to evaluate publication bias [58]. Bias was assumed if the p-value was < 0.05.

Role of the funding source

The funding source had no role in the study design, the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data, or the writing of the report. The corresponding author had full access to all data and had final responsibility to submit the paper for publication.

Abbreviations

MIBC: Muscle invasive bladder cancer; NMIBC: Non-muscle invasive bladder cancer; TURBT: Transurethral resection of bladder tumorl CIS: Carcinoma in situ; IHC: Immunohistochemistry; RFS: Recurrence-free survival; PFS: Progression-free survival; DSS: Disease-specific survival; OS: Overall survival; HRs: Hazard ratios; PRISMA: Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses; PICOS: Population, intervention, comparator, outcome, and study; UC: Urothelial carcinoma; REMARK: REporting recommendations for tumor MARKer prognostic studies; CIs: Confidence intervals.

Author contributions

Kyungtae Ko: Drafting of the manuscript, Acquisition of data, analysis and interpretation of data, Change Wook Jeong: Acquisition of data, Cheol Kwak: Analysis of data: Hyeon Hoe Kim; Analysis of data: Ja Hyeon Ku; Analysis and Interpretation of data, Statistical Analysis, Obtainin funding.

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

The authors declare no competing financial interests.

FUNDING

This study was supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korea government (MSIP) (No. 2016R1A2B4011623).

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