| Literature DB >> 1680784 |
A L Woods1, P A Hall, N A Shepherd, A M Hanby, N H Waseem, D P Lane, D A Levison.
Abstract
PCNA is a nuclear protein that is synthesized in late G1 and S phases of the cell cycle and is, therefore, correlated with the cell proliferative state. A new monoclonal antibody (PC10) to genetically engineered PCNA has been shown to label proliferating cells in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded normal human tissues. Previous studies in lymphomas, using various markers of cell proliferation, have shown a strong correlation between indices of cell proliferation and histological grade. These studies have shown that within each histological subtype there is often a wide range of proliferative indices and that these may be of some prognostic significance. Thirty-one gastrointestinal lymphomas were studied. Our results show that there is a good correlation between PC10 index and histological grade of tumour (0.01 P greater than P greater than 0.001) and also a significant relationship between PC10 index and S+G2+M phase fraction as measured by flow cytometric analysis (r2 = 0.62; P less than 0.01). Twenty-three cases were available for survival analysis. In these cases a high PC10 score correlated with poor survival (P = 0.04). Based on this series, it appears that there is a significant relationship between PC10 index and histological grade, and between PC10 index and S+G2+M phase as measured by flow cytometric analysis. In addition, our results suggest that a high PC10 index is an adverse prognostic factor in primary gastrointestinal lymphoma.Entities:
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Year: 1991 PMID: 1680784 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2559.1991.tb00890.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Histopathology ISSN: 0309-0167 Impact factor: 5.087