Prognostic value of p53 in non-small cell lung cancer: Relationship with proliferating cell nuclear antigen and cigarette smoking
1997
Abstract p53 mutations are among the most frequent genetic alterations reported in human lung cancer. Although the prognostic value of altered p53 expression is still debated, it is accepted widely that estimation of the proliferation rate has an important prognostic role. Moreover, an association between certain types of human lung cancers and tobacco use is well known. Drawing from this background, we investigated the immunohistochemical expression of mutant oncogenic p53 protein, and related it to the smoking history of 61 patients with non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) and to the expression pattern of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), which is considered to be an important negative prognostic factor in several neoplasms. We found p53 overexpression in 22 (36.1%) specimens, including 16 squamous carcinomas (41%) and six (27.2%) adenocarcinomas. PCNA nuclear staining was detected in 98.4% of the specimens, and a significantly higher PCNA expression score was found in all of the p53-positive samples. When the patient survival time was compared, p53 accumulation had a statistically significant negative prognostic value ( P
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