%0 Journal Article %T Decreased expression of zinc-alpha2-glycoprotein in hepatocellular carcinoma associates with poor prognosis %A Yan Huang %A Lin-Zi Li %A Chris Zhi-Yi Zhang %A Chun Yi %A Li-Li Liu %A Xuan Zhou %A Guo-Bing Xie %A Mu-Yan Cai %A Yan Li %A Jing-Ping Yun %J Journal of Translational Medicine %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1479-5876-10-106 %X Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) was applied to determine mRNA level of AZGP1 in 20 paired fresh HCC tissues. Clinical and pathological data of 246 HCC patients were collected. Tissue-microarray-based immunohistochemistry (IHC) was performed to examine AZGP1 expression in HCC samples. Relationship between AZGP1 expression and clinicopathological features was analyzed by Chi-square test, Kaplan-Meier analysis and Cox proportional hazards regression model.AZGP1 expression was significantly lower in 80.0% (16/20) of tumorous tissues than that in the corresponding adjacent nontumorous liver tissues (P£¿<£¿0.001). Consistently, IHC data revealed that decreased expression of AZGP1 was present in 80.1% (197/246) of HCC patient tissues (P£¿<£¿0.001). Furthermore, AZGP1 expression in HCC significantly associated with several clinicopathological parameters, including serum AFP level (P£¿=£¿0.013), liver cirrhosis (P£¿=£¿0.002) and tumor differentiation (P£¿=£¿0.025). Moreover, HCC patients with high AZGP1 expression survived longer, with better overall survival (P£¿=£¿0.006) and disease-free survival (P£¿=£¿0.025). In addition, low AZGP1 expression associated with worse relapse-free survival (P£¿=£¿0.046) and distant metastatic progression-free survival (P£¿=£¿0.036).AZGP1 was downregulated in HCC and could be served as a promising prognostic marker for HCC patients. %K AZGP1 %K Hepatocellular carcinoma %K Prognosis %K Recurrence %K Metastasis %U http://www.translational-medicine.com/content/10/1/106/abstract