Matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) and its tissue inhibitor (TIMP-2) are prognostic factors in cervical cancer, related to invasive disease but not to high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) or virus persistence after treatment of CIN
Objective: Matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) and
its tissue inhibitor (TIMP-2) are important regulators of cancer
invasion and metastasis. Their associations to high-risk (HR)
human papillomavirus (HPV) in cervical intra-epithelial
neoplasia (CIN) and cervical cancer (CC) are unexplored and
their prognostic significance in CC remains controversial.
Materials and Methods: As part of our HPV-PathogenISS study,
a series of 150 CCs and 152 CIN lesions were examined using
immunohistochemical (IHC) staining for MMP-2 and TIMP-2
and tested for HPV using PCR with 3 primer sets (MY09/11,
GP5+/GP6+, SPF). Follow-up data were available from all
squamous cell carcinoma patients and 67 CIN lesions had been
monitored with serial PCR for HPV after cone treatment. Results:
MMP-2 increased with the grade of CIN, with major upregulation
upon transition to invasive cancer (OR 20.78)
(95%CI 7.16-60.23) (p=0.0001). TIMP-2 retained its normal
expression until CIN3, with dramatic down-regulation in invasive
disease (p=0.0001 for trend). Thus, the MMP2:TIMP-2 ratio
increased with progressive CIN, exceeding the value 1.0 only in
invasive disease. Both MMP-2 and TIMP-2 are highly specific
(TIMP-2; 100%) discriminators of CIN with 100% positive
predictive value (TIMP-2), but suffer from low sensitivity and
negative predictive value. Neither MMP-2 nor TIMP-2 showed
any significant association with HR-HPV or virus
persistence/clearance. TIMP-2 (but not MMP-2) was a
significant predictor of survival in univariate (Kaplan-Meier)
analysis (p=0.007), but lost its significance in multivariate (Cox)
analysis. Conclusion: The activities of MMP-2 and TIMP-2 in
cervical carcinogenesis seem to be unrelated to HR-HPV. The
inverse MMP-2:TIMP-2 ratio is a sign of poor prognosis. A
combination of a TIMP-2 assay with another test showing high
SE and high NPV (e.g., HCII for HPV) should provide a
potential screening tool capable of accurate detection of CIN.