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Title: Clinical implications of serum anti-p53 antibodies for patients with gastric carcinoma. Author: Maehara Y, Kakeji Y, Watanabe A, Baba H, Kusumoto H, Kohnoe S, Sugimachi K. Journal: Cancer; 1999 Jan 15; 85(2):302-8. PubMed ID: 10023696. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Mutations of p53 can lead to the production of anti-p53 antibodies in sera of cancer patients. Before this study, the value of preoperative serum anti-p53 antibodies in determining the prognoses of patients with gastric carcinoma had yet to be determined. METHODS: The authors used a highly specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kit (Pharma Cell, France) to determine the preoperative presence of serum anti-p53 antibodies in 120 patients with gastric carcinoma. The relation between the positivity of serum anti-p53 antibodies and p53 abnormal staining of gastric carcinoma tissues was examined. Clinicopathologic characteristics and prognoses of these patients were given attention. RESULTS: Anti-p53 antibodies were detected in 19.2%(23 of 120) of these patients with gastric carcinoma. Among those who were positive for anti-p53 antibodies, female patients were predominant, the depth of invasion was greater, and liver metastasis was present, as compared with those who were negative for anti-p53 antibodies. Regarding other factors, there were no differences between those who were positive or negative for anti-p53 antibodies. Gastric carcinoma tissues had a 60.9% (14 of 23) positivity rate of p53 staining with anti-p53 antibodies and a 33.0% (32 of 97) negativity rate, and this difference was statistically significant (P < 0.05). The survival time of patients with anti-p53 antibodies in their sera was shorter than that of subjects with sera negative for anti-p53 antibodies (P < 0.05). The presence of anti-p53 antibodies was not an independent prognostic factor in multivariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS: Serum assay of anti-p53 antibodies is a rapid and readily facilitated test for predicting tumor advancement, depth of invasion, and liver metastasis, and it will show a poorer prognosis for surgically treated patients with gastric carcinoma.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]