The expression of P-glycoprotein in primary and recurrent human breast cancer was investigated by means of immunohistochemistry, using a monoclonal antibody (C219) and the streptavidin-biotin-peroxi- dase method. Twelve patients received no chemotherapeutic treatment. The other 11 patients were treated with chemotherapy, and all developed clinical resistance to it. No or only minimal reactivity was found in specimens coming from the untreated patients (12 cases) or from patients treated with substances not involved in the multidrug resistance phenomenon (four cases). In contrast, three out of seven tumours from patients treated with multidrug resistance related substances showed clear reactivity (positive staining in more than 20% of the tumour cells). In one of these cases, where specimens of the tumour could be studied before and after treatment, an association between the latter and expression of P-glycoprotein was suggested. Finally, this marked expression of P-glycoprotein only took place in tumours treated over a longer space of time (five courses or more of multidrug resistance related chemotherapy). © The Macmillan Press Ltd., 1989.
CITATION STYLE
Schneider, J., Bak, M., Efferth, T., Kaufmann, M., Mattern, J., & Volm, M. (1989). P-Glycoprotein expression in treated and untreated human breast cancer. British Journal of Cancer, 60(6), 815–818. https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1989.372
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