Usefulness of immunohistochemical staining for p53 in the prognosis of breast carcinomas: correlations with established prognosis parameters and with the proliferation marker, MIB-1. Beck, T, et al. Gynecol. Oncol., 57: 96-104 (1995)
1994
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Mutations of the p53 gene often result in the overexpression of p53 protein. Previous studies have suggested that the function of p53 and its mutant protein forms may be linked with the disease course of patients with a breast carcinoma. In the present study, we tested 462 primary breast carcinomas for the presence of p53 antigen using immunohistochemical methods employing antibodies against the clone, DO-1. These tumors were also immunohistochemically stained using the monoclonal antibody, MIB-1, in order to demonstrate the presence of Ki67. Comparison of the presence of p53 with other prognostic parameters revealed highly significant negative correlations with estrogen- and progesterone-receptor status (P < 0.001 and P = 0.001, respectively) as well as positive correlations with both the presence of MIB-1 (P < 0.001) and the histological grading (P = 0.008). The presence of p53 was not correlated with tumor stage and node status. Evaluation of the findings for all 462 tumors as well as for node-positive and -negative subgroups revealed less favorable findings for overall survival and the disease-free period for both p53-positive tumors (for total group, overall survival, P = 0.0002, disease-free period, P = 0.02; for node-positive group, overall survival, P = 0.0004, disease-free period, P = 0.1045) and breast carcinomas with higher proportions of cell nuclei positive for MIB-1 (total, overall survival, P = 0.0026, disease-free period, P = 0.0022; node-positive, overall survival, P = 0.021, disease-free period, P = 0.0882). We were able to demonstrate that p53 expression in breast carcinomas means a significantly worse prognosis for grade II tumors (overall survival, P = 0.0002; disease-free period, P = 0.0116), for overall survival in the case of estrogen-receptor-positive tumors (P = 0.014), and for tumors showing increased proliferation activity (overall survival, P = 0.0477). | 7705708
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Absence of p53 autoantibodies in a significant proportion of breast cancer patients. Vojtesek, B, et al. Br. J. Cancer, 71: 1253-6 (1995)
1994
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We analysed antibodies specific for human p53 in sera from primary breast cancer patients using three different immunoassays and we related these results to the p53 level in tumour tissue detected by immunohistochemistry. Only 44% (11/25) of apparently enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)-positive sera were from patients with a high level of p53 protein in more than 50% of their tumour cells. Surprisingly, 36% (9/25) of the sera originated from patients with no detectable p53 protein at all. Immunoprecipitation data suggested that the reason for this discrepancy is that at least some of the antibodies detected as positive in the ELISA in these sera from patients with clinical stage I and stage II breast cancers may be induced by immunogens other than p53 protein. Many of these reactions give apparently positive signals in a variety of p53 assays, and very stringent analysis is required to avoid possible misinterpretation of these responses as a p53-specific B-cell response in human cancer patients. | 7779720
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