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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Amplification of chromosome 11q13 is frequently observed in human malignancies, including breast cancers. A candidate oncogene at this locus is the CCND1 gene, which encodes the cell cycle regulatory protein cyclin D1. Because published data on the relationship between 11q13 amplification and prognosis in breast cancer have been controversial, we investigated the clinical significance of CCND1 amplification and its association with established clinicopathological features of prognosis in 1014 primary breast cancer patients. Amplification of the CCND1 gene and the INT-2/FGF-3 gene, which also maps to 11q13, was 10% and 17%, respectively. There were no associations between CCND1 or INT-2 amplification and patient age, tumor size, tumor grade, axillary lymph node status, HER/neu amplification, MIB-1 monoclonal antibody to Ki67 antigen count, or
p53
expression. CCND1 amplification was predominantly observed in
hormone receptor
-positive tumors; at a copy number >/=3, CCND1 amplification was significantly correlated with both estrogen receptor (ER; P = 0.036) and progesterone receptor (P = 0.012) positivity. After a median follow-up period of 66 months, CCND1 or INT-2 amplification was not associated with significant increases in relapse or death from breast cancer. However, in the node-negative and ER-positive subgroups, there was a trend for an increased relapse rate in patients with INT-2 or CCND1 amplification. Thus, in this study, assessment of CCND1 or INT-2 amplification at 11q13 by slot-blot hybridization was of little use in determining phenotype or disease outcome in the whole group of patients but had a potential role in identifying a subset of poor-prognosis patients within the node-negative or ER-positive, good-prognosis groups. Because the prevalence of CCND1 amplification is much lower than the reported prevalence of cyclin D1 overexpression, additional studies are required to determine the true prognostic significance of altered cyclin D1 expression in breast cancer.
...
PMID:Cyclin DI amplification is not associated with reduced overall survival in primary breast cancer but may predict early relapse in patients with features of good prognosis. 981 85
To investigate the possible role of positron emission tomography (PET) with fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) in the prognostic evaluation of primary breast cancer, we studied 86 patients with T1-3 (TNM classification) breast tumours before surgery and compared the tumour FDG uptake, calculated as a standardized uptake value (SUV), with postoperative histopathological findings, steroid
hormone receptor
status of the tumour, thymidine labelling index (LI) and tissular expression of
p53
. SUV was significantly higher in infiltrating ductal carcinomas (n = 68; median SUV = 5.6) than in lobular ones (n = 18; median SUV = 3.8), and in grade 3 carcinomas (n = 26; median SUV = 6.2) than in grade 1-2 ones (n = 60; median SUV = 4.9). Moreover, SUV was significantly higher in carcinomas with high levels of
p53
(n = 12; median SUV = 9.5) than in those with low levels (n = 48; median SUV = 4.25). By contrast, there was no significant correlation between SUV and the steroid
hormone receptor
status or LI of tumours. Our data demonstrate that FDG uptake, expressed as SUV, is associated with certain prognostic factors in breast cancer, such as histopathological grading and
p53
expression, which can be assessed only by means of postoperative in vitro examinations. Hence, the information provided by FDG-PET is to some extent related to relevant information on tumour biology. The clinical value of these data will have to be confirmed by analysis of the independence of SUV from other prognostic factors by means of a multivariate analysis performed on a larger series of patients with adequate follow-up. If SUV is confirmed as an independent variable, FDG-PET could assume an important role in the determination of appropriate therapeutic strategies for primary breast cancer.
...
PMID:Association between [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose uptake and postoperative histopathology, hormone receptor status, thymidine labelling index and p53 in primary breast cancer: a preliminary observation. 981 84
Heat shock proteins (HSPs) or stress proteins are synthesized by cells in response to environmental stress. Expression of HSPs by cells may have important physiological or pathological implications. In this study, we carried out an immunohistochemical and biochemical examination of low (hsp27), intermediate (hsp60), and high (hsp89) molecular weight HSP expression in reactive lymph nodes and in lymph nodes of patients with various types of lymphomas. In normal or reactive lymphoid tissues, hsp89 is abundant in large "transformed" lymphoid cells and immunoblasts. Hsp60 is widely distributed in lymphoid tissues, whereas hsp27 is absent in all lymphoid cells and histiocytes. Among lymphomas, the Hodgkin's Reed-Sternberg (H-RS) cells in Hodgkin's disease (HD) had the greatest abundance of hsp89 and hsp60 and, in 20% of cases, hsp27, in contrast to a much weaker staining of anti-hsp89 and -hsp60 in the background reactive lymphoid cells. The large lymphoid cells in small lymphocytic lymphoma are also rich in hsp89, but not hsp60 and hsp27. In contrast, the malignant cells in anaplastic large cell lymphoma and most high-grade tumors, including immunoblastic lymphomas, expressed minimal amounts of hsp89 and hsp60 and virtually no hsp27. Thus, the cellular level of HSPs was neither correlated with the proliferative capacity nor with the aggressiveness of the lymphomas. Hsp89, hsp60, and hsp27, as well, serve critical roles in the chaperoning of cellular proteins (e.g., a Mr 43,000 protein) in H-RS cells. The known interactions of HSPs with Rb,
p53
, peptide-MHC class II complexes, and cofactors of the glucocorticoid
hormone receptor
have further broadened the importance of HSPs in cell metabolism and in response to extracellular signals for proliferation, differentiation, or growth suppression (or apoptosis) of H-RS cells. Abundant HSP expression is seen only in HD, but not in other lymphomas. Such expression could have vital roles in the pathogenesis of HD.
...
PMID:Abundance of heat shock proteins (hsp89, hsp60, and hsp27) in malignant cells of Hodgkin's disease. 985 87
Genetic alterations of tumour suppressor genes, for which loss of heterozygosity (LOH) is one mechanism of gene inactivation, are important steps in the development of endometrial cancer. To investigate the clinical relevance of LOH of BRCA1 (17q21),
TP53
(17p13) and TCRD (14q11) in endometrial cancer, polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based fluorescent DNA technology for the detection of microsatellite polymorphisms was applied. One hundred and thirteen archival endometrial cancer samples with matched normal tissues were examined. Allele loss at three loci were correlated with age, tumour size, lymph node status, metastases, stage, histological types, grade, expression of oestrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PgR), family history of cancer, previous history of cancer or precursor lesions, and previous history of hormone replacement therapy (HRT). LOH for BRCA1 was detected in 18.1%, of
TP53
in 26.9%, and of TCRD in 26.3% of informative cases. LOH of BRCA1 correlated with medium grade, positive ER status, and family history of cancer; LOH of
TP53
correlated with younger age, high grade, positive PgR status, and with tumours from patients without HRT; LOH of TCRD correlated only with family history of cancer. LOH at all three loci correlated only with grade and positive family history. Allele loss of one of the three tumour suppressor loci did not correlate with disease-free survival (DFS), but LOH of BRCA1 correlated significantly with decreased overall survival (OS). The latter, together with the correlation of LOH of BRCA1 locus with steroid
hormone receptor
expression, might give a hint to the potential involvement of the co-localised 17 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (HSD) gene in the development of endometrial cancer.
...
PMID:Loss of heterozygosity of BRCA1, TP53 and TCRD markers analysed in sporadic endometrial cancer. 989 67
Male breast carcinoma (MBC) accounts for only 1% of total mammary carcinomas. Controversy exists about whether MBC differs clinically and pathologically from female breast carcinoma (FBC). We compared 10 archival cases with 75 stage-matched FBCs. Clinical data, histologic details, immunostains for mammary lineage markers, and results of several putative "prognostic" analyses were addressed, including DNA ploidy and expression of c-erbB-2 (neu) oncoprotein and
p53 protein
. Cumulative literature data on 2,530 MBCs were contrasted with information from 135 institutional cases of FBC. A statistically significant difference in grade 3 lesions at low stage persisted when MBCs of all stages were compared with similar FBCs. For stages I and IIA, 5-year survival was 60% and 86% for MBCs and FBCs, respectively (also statistically significant). This difference disappeared when all stages were compared. A similar number of MBCs and FBCs, regardless of stage, demonstrated DNA aneuploidy with or without synthesis of S-100 protein, gross cystic disease fluid protein-15, c-erbB-2 protein, and
p53 protein
. Hormone receptor positivity was more common in MBC than in FBC at high tumor stages. Low-stage MBC and FBC differ biologically; MBCs tend to manifest at a higher grade with lessened 5-year survival. However, aside from distinctions in
hormone receptor
proteins, broader comparison of MBC and FBC at stages IIB and higher shows no significant differences in 5-year survival or expression of breast cancer-associated gene products.
...
PMID:Low-stage carcinoma of the male breast. A histologic, immunohistochemical, and flow cytometric comparison with localized female breast carcinoma. 989 55
Some prognostic factors, such as steroid receptors, appear strongly related to outcome in early studies with short follow-up, but as follow-up matures the relationships appear to weaken. We investigated this phenomenon for several factors (tumor size, axillary lymph nodes, S-phase fraction, estrogen receptor (ER) status, and adjuvant therapy) in a large sample of breast cancer cases (N=2,873) with up to 17 years of follow-up for disease-free survival (DFS). Subjects in the study were identified from patients who had
hormone receptor
assays performed in our laboratory. Analysis of DFS included fitting a multivariate Cox proportional hazards model, testing for nonproportionality, and examining diagnostic plots. The assumption of proportional hazards was violated for several factors including ER, tumor size, and S-phase fraction. For ER, the hazard ratio was initially less than 1.0, indicating a good effect on prognosis, but increased at later times to values greater than 1.0, indicating a bad effect on prognosis. In contrast, the hazard ratios for tumor size and S-phase were initially high and decreased asymptotically toward 1.0 over time. Analysis of
p53
expression in a subset of cases yielded qualitatively similar results. We conclude that several standard prognostic factors (ER, tumor size, S-phase fraction) and possibly other investigational factors have important but nonproportional effects on hazard. It is likely that violation of proportional hazards is common and not limited to breast cancer. Failure to recognize violations of proportional hazards can lead to both over- and under-estimation of the effects of important prognostic factors.
...
PMID:Time-dependence of hazard ratios for prognostic factors in primary breast cancer. 1006 85
The immunohistochemical expression of bcl-2 protein, and its correlations with clinicopathological features and prognosis were studied in patients with invasive breast carcinoma. Bcl-2 positive expression significantly correlated with
hormone receptor
positivity and histological tumor differentiation, and inversely correlated with
p53
overaccumulation. No correlation was observed between bcl-2 expression and patient age, menopausal status, tumor size, and lymph node metastasis. Survivals of stage I to III patients who had not received adjuvant hormonal therapy showed no difference between bcl-2-positive and -negative tumors, even if patients were divided as with or without adjuvant chemotherapy, or with or without nodal involvement. In consequence, immunohistochemical bcl-2-positivity correlates with positive hormone receptors and well differentiated phenotypes in invasive breast carcinoma, however, it might not predict response to adjuvant chemotherapy and not be a favorable predictive value in patients treated without adjuvant hormonal therapy.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of immunohistochemical Bcl-2 expression in invasive breast carcinoma. 1020 94
The extent of apoptosis and the expression of Bcl-2 was investigated in tumor samples from 165 women who underwent surgery for primary breast carcinoma between 1989 and 1990 in South-East Sweden. Apoptosis was assessed by a DNA fragmentation assay for flow cytometry. Bcl-2 protein expression was analyzed with immunocytochemistry. Bcl-2 immunoreactivity correlated with estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PgR) positivity and was inversely correlated with
p53
accumulation. Apoptosis increased with patient age and a high degree of apoptosis was negatively associated with Bcl-2 immunostaining. Apoptosis showed no significant correlation with any of the other variables studied, including prognosis. The group with Bcl-2-positive tumors tended to have a lower risk of distant recurrence than others, but the association of Bcl-2 with recurrence was different in groups divided by ER and PgR status. Whereas Bcl-2 positivity indicated a low recurrence rate among PgR-negative patients, in the PgR-positive group, those with Bcl-2-positive tumors showed a non significantly higher recurrence rate than Bcl-2-negative cases. In the PgR-positive group, Bcl-2-positive tumors also appeared more frequently to be lymph node positive and DNA aneuploid. The results suggest that
hormone receptor
status is of importance for the prognostic role of Bcl-2. Likewise, patient age merits consideration when apoptosis is studied in human cancer.
...
PMID:Apoptosis and Bcl-2 expression in relation to age, tumor characteristics and prognosis in breast cancer. South-East Sweden Breast Cancer Group. 1039 27
Factors reflecting two major aspects of tumour biology, invasion (urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), plasminogen activator inhibiter (PAI-1), cathepsin D) and proliferation (S-phase fraction (SPF), Ki-67,
p53
, HER-2/neu), were assessed in 125 node-negative breast cancer patients without adjuvant systemic therapy. Median follow-up time was 76 months. Antigen levels of uPA, PAI-1 and cathepsin D were immunoenzymatically determined in tumour tissue extracts. SPF and ploidy were determined flow-cytometrically, Ki"'-67,
p53
, and HER-2/neu immunohistochemically in adjacent paraffin sections. Their prognostic impact on disease-free (DFS) and overall survival (OS) was compared to that of traditional factors (tumour size, grading,
hormone receptor
status). Univariate analysis determined PAI-1 (P < 0.001), uPA (P = 0.008), cathepsin D (P = 0.004) and SPF (P = 0.023) as significant for DFS. All other factors failed to be of significant prognostic value. In a Cox model, only PAI-1 was significant for DFS (P < 0.001, relative risk (RR) 6.2). In CART analysis for DFS, the combination of PAI-1 and uPA gave the best risk group discrimination. For OS, PAI-1, cathepsin D, tumour size and ploidy were statistically significant in univariate, but PAI-1 was the only independently significant factor in Cox analysis (P < 0.001, RR 8.9). In particular, this analysis shows that PAI-1 is still a strong and independent prognostic factor in node-negative breast cancer after extended 6-year median follow-up.
...
PMID:Risk-group discrimination in node-negative breast cancer using invasion and proliferation markers: 6-year median follow-up. 1040 48
To evaluate the prognostic relevance of Ki-67 and topoisomerase IIalpha expression in relation to tumor stage, grade, and
hormone receptor
content, 942 ductal infiltrating carcinomas of the breast were examined by means of the monoclonal antibodies Ki-S11 (Ki-67) and Ki-S4 (topoisomerase IIalpha). pS2, c-erbB2, and
p53
were additionally considered as prognostic variables. The median follow-up time was 149 months. Eight-hundred-and-sixty-three tumors reacted with Ki-S11 and Ki-S4; the labeling indices of the two antigens were closely associated (r = 0.93). Both correlated positively with the tumor size, c-erbB2, and
p53
expression, and negatively with patient age,
hormone receptor
content, and pS2 immunostaining. In the univariate analysis, Ki-S11 and Ki-S4 scores, nodal status, tumor size, tumor grade, and progesterone receptor content strongly predicted both overall and metastasis-free survival (p < 0.00001). Estrogen receptor status,
p53
, and c-erbB2 were of minor significance. Concerning overall survival, multivariate Cox regression analysis selected a Ki-S4 score >25% (p < 0.00001) next to the nodal status, and before tumor size, progesterone receptor content, and patient age. Independent predictors of the occurrence of distant metastases were nodal status, Ki-S4, tumor size, grade 1, and progesterone receptor negativity, in that order. The Ki-S11 score was of independent prognostic significance only if examined as a continuous variable. We conclude that topoisomerase IIalpha expression as assessed by monoclonal antibody Ki-S4 may add valuable information to current prognostic models for breast cancer. Its predictive value appears to be essentially related to the proliferative activity of tumor cells.
...
PMID:Prognostic significance of Ki-67 and topoisomerase IIalpha expression in infiltrating ductal carcinoma of the breast. A multivariate analysis of 863 cases. 1047 80
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