Clinical significance of p53 alterations in surgically treated prostate cancers.

  • Thorsten Schlomm
  • Liv Iwers
  • Patrick Kirstein
  • Birte Jessen
  • Jens Köllermann
  • Sarah Minner
  • Annika Passow-Drolet
  • Martina Mirlacher
  • Karin Milde-Langosch
  • Markus Graefen
  • Alexander Haese
  • Thomas Steuber
  • Ronald Simon
  • Hartwig Huland
  • Guido Sauter
  • Andreas Erbersdobler

Abstract

Despite the high number of previous studies, the role of p53 alterations in prostate cancer is not clearly defined. To address the role of p53 alterations in prostate cancer biology, a total of 2514 cancers treated by radical prostatectomy were successfully analyzed by immunohistochemistry in a tissue microarray format. Overall a low rate of p53-positive tumors was found (2.5%). A significant underestimation of p53-positive cases was excluded by subsequent large section analyses and direct sequencing of the p53 gene in subsets of our patients. Large section analysis of 23 cases considered negative on the tissue microarray yielded only one weakly p53-positive tumor. Only 4 out of 64 (6.4%) high-grade tumors, that were considered negative for p53 by immunohistochemistry, presented exon 5-8 mutations. These data suggest a high sensitivity of our immunohistochemistry approach and confirm the overall low frequency of p53 alterations in clinically localized prostate cancer. A positive p53 immunostaining was strongly associated with presence of exon 5-8 mutations (P

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number11
ISSN0893-3952
Publication statusPublished - 2008
pubmed 18552821