| Literature DB >> 12091064 |
Markus Bredel1, Maria Piribauer, Christine Marosi, Peter Birner, Brigitte Gatterbauer, Ingeborg Fischer, Thomas Ströbel, Karl Rössler, Herbert Budka, Johannes A Hainfellner.
Abstract
Assessment of tumour cell proliferation in glioblastoma (GB) has been a topic of considerable research interest over the past decade. However, the correlation of tumour proliferation and patient outcome has yielded controversial results. In this study, we examined immunohistochemically, using paraffin-embedded tissue, the expression of the proliferation-related markers DNA topoisomerase IIalpha (TIIalpha) and Ki-67 antigen in a cohort of 114 GB patients treated consecutively with surgery and radiochemotherapy, and correlated the expression with patient outcome. The TIIalpha labelling index (LI) ranged between 5.2 and 87.2% (median: 25.6%). Survival analysis disclosed an association between high TIIalpha expression levels and prolonged survival (P=0.040, log-rank test). TIIalpha expression correlates closely with Ki-67 labelling index (R=0.927, P<0.001), which itself is predictive of patient survival (P=0.044). However, in multivariate analysis, only the Karnofsky performance status remained predictive of patient survival. We conclude that high expression of TIIalpha and Ki-67 appears to be associated with a prolonged survival in our cohort of GB patients.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12091064 DOI: 10.1016/s0959-8049(02)00065-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Cancer ISSN: 0959-8049 Impact factor: 9.162