A small but not insignificant number of patients experience a prolonged survival after treatment of metastatic soft tissue sarcoma. This must be weighed against the majority of the patients who benefit little from the therapy, but nevertheless experience its side-effects. It would therefore be of utmost importance to be able to screen for those patients who respond to the treatment. Since proliferative cells are more sensitive to chemotherapy than non-proliferative cells, we measured the proliferation rate of the primary tumour of 55 soft tissue sarcoma patients with locally advanced or metastatic disease by determining the flow cytometric S phase fraction and immunohistochemical Ki-67 and cyclin A scores. S phase fraction or Ki-67 score did not predict chemotherapy response or progression-free survival. A high cyclin A score, however, correlated with a better chemotherapy response (P = 0.02) and longer progression-free survival time (P = 0.04). Our results suggest that a high cyclin A score predicts chemotherapy sensitivity.
CITATION STYLE
Huuhtanen, R. L., Wiklund, T. A., Blomqvist, C. P., Böhling, T. O., Virolainen, M. J., Tribukait, B., & Andersson, L. C. (1999). A high proliferation rate measured by cyclin A predicts a favourable chemotherapy response in soft tissue sarcoma patients. British Journal of Cancer, 81(6), 1017–1021. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6690801
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