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[Rinsho Byori 50 : 970`975, 2002]
Clinical Importance of Serum anti-p53 Antibodies as Tumor Markers
Hiroshi SAKAI, PhD*1 and Eiichi OKAMOTO, MD*2
Anti-p53 antibodies are autoantibodies induced by mutation of p53 cancer-suppressor gene, and are considered to be indirect markers for p53 gene mutations and abnormally high p53 gene levels.
We evaluated the usefulness of the measurement of anti-p53 antibodies by enzymed-linked immunosorbent assay using serum samples from patients with various disorders and normal subjects.
The anti-p53 antibody concentration was high in patients with lung, esophageal, gastric, hepatocellular, colonic, rectal or ovarian cancer and significantly differed between the group with neoplasms and those with non-neoplastic disorders. Particularly high concentrations were observed in patients with malignant tumors.
The mean agreement rate between anti-p53 antibodies and conventional tumor markers was only 47.8% despite slight differences among disorders. The positive rate increased to 63.0% by their combination assay. In addition, anti-p53 antibodies were independent markers, not complimentary to conventional markers. The mean agreement rate between anti-p53 antibodies and tissue p53 was 70.0%. Though the anti-p53 antibody-positive rate was lower than the tissue p53-positive rate, anti-p53 antibodies may be useful new tumor markers because specimens from the affected tissue are not necessary.
*1Department of Clinical Laboratory, Kyoto National Hospital, Kyoto 612-8555
yKey Wordszmalignant neoplastic diseases, anti-p53 antibodies, tumor marker, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
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