Clinical significance of DNA ploidy and S-phase fraction and their relation to p53 protein, c-erbB-2 protein and HCG in operable muscle-invasive bladder cancer

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Abstract

DNA ploidy and S-phase fraction (SPF), determined by flow cytometry were studied in 118 patients with muscle-invasive transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the urinary bladder, scheduled for cystectomy after pre-operative radiotherapy (20 Gy/1 week) with or without systemic cisplatin-based neo-adjuvant chemotherapy. The correlation between these parameters and immunohistochemically demonstrated p53, c-erbB-2 and HCG was also investigated. There were 16 DNA diploid and 102 DNA non-diploid tumours. DNA ploidy was not related to the T (all 118 patients) or pN (58 patients) category, occurrence of stage reduction or cancer-related 5 years survival. Patients with high SPF tumours tended, however, to have a better prognosis than those with low SPF TCC reaching the level of significance (P < 0.05) for those patients who had high SPF tumours and received neo-adjuvant chemotherapy. Fifty-one of the tumours were p53 positive. p53 positive tumours were significantly more often found in TCC with low SPFs than in those with high SPFs. Respectively 12 and 9% of the tumours were HCG and c-erbB-2 positive, without correlation to DNA ploidy or SPF. We conclude that DNA ploidy does not represent a prognostic parameter in muscle-invasive operable bladder carcinomas. A high SPF, determined by FCM, may be helpful to identify patients with chemotherapy-sensitive TCC of the urinary bladder. © 1993, Macmillan Press Ltd.

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Fosså, S. D., Berner, A. A., Jacobsen, A. B., Waehre, H., Kvarstein, B., Urnes, T., … Pettersen, E. O. (1993). Clinical significance of DNA ploidy and S-phase fraction and their relation to p53 protein, c-erbB-2 protein and HCG in operable muscle-invasive bladder cancer. British Journal of Cancer, 68(3), 572–578. https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1993.388

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