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. 1995 May 8;91(2):235-40.
doi: 10.1016/0304-3835(95)03744-h.

Levels of p53 antigen in the plasma of patients with adenomas and carcinomas of the colon

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Free article

Levels of p53 antigen in the plasma of patients with adenomas and carcinomas of the colon

J C Luo et al. Cancer Lett. .
Free article

Abstract

Plasma levels of p53 protein were examined by an enzyme linked immunosorbent assay in 184 patients enrolled in a colonoscopy study. The mean levels among 47 individuals with normal colonoscopic examinations and no prior history of colonic neoplasia (0.12 ng/ml) and among 61 individuals with normal colonoscopic examinations and a prior history of colonic neoplasia (0.09 ng/ml) were similar. However, the mean levels among 54 individuals with newly diagnosed colonic adenomas (0.44 ng/ml) and 22 individuals with newly diagnosed colonic carcinomas (0.55 ng/ml) were statistically significantly elevated compared to the normal controls (P < 0.02). Among these tumor patients, the plasma levels tended to increase with increasing adenoma size and with increasing carcinoma stage, although these trends were not statistically significant. Defining a significant positive plasma level as any value greater than ten times background, the percentage of positive samples increased from 4% in the controls to 20% in the adenoma cases to 32% in the carcinoma cases. These results demonstrate that plasma p53 protein levels are elevated in a subgroup of individuals with colonic neoplasia.

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