Assessment of proliferation indicators in residual prostatic adenocarcinoma cells after radical external beam radiotherapy
- PMID: 8899003
- DOI: 10.1002/(SICI)1097-0045(199611)29:5<303::AID-PROS5>3.0.CO;2-A
Assessment of proliferation indicators in residual prostatic adenocarcinoma cells after radical external beam radiotherapy
Abstract
Background: Fifty-five patients who had received radical external beam radiotherapy (RRT) for clinically staged, localized prostatic adenocarcinoma were examined with systematic sextant mapping with the help of transrectal ultrasound-guided core biopsies. The average follow-up after RRT was 6.8 years. Residual cancer was found histopathologically in 67% (37/55) of the patients investigated.
Methods: In the present report, the viability of these tumor cells was studied using immunohistochemical staining methods with the monoclonal antibodies MIB1 and PC10, which are specific for the proliferation-associated antigens Ki-67 and PCNA.
Results: Available data concerning proliferating activity in the pretreatment situation in 12 of these patients revealed that proliferating activity was substantially reduced in the majority of cases after RRT. Post-RRT, Ki-67, and PCNA activity was nonetheless found to varying degrees in 64% and 94% of the 36 evaluable tumor-harboring specimens, respectively. In the majority of cases, the proportion of proliferating cells, designated "score", was low. However, Ki-67 scores of up to 8% and PCNA scores of up to 50% were obtained in 35% (8/23) and 97% (33/34) of the specimens, respectively, with proliferative activity. There was no significant correlation between tumor grade and proliferative score in the follow-up biopsies. In the 36 cases investigated, endocrine treatment did not influence the proliferation results.
Conclusions: The present study demonstrates a proliferative capacity in residual tumor cells in a long-term follow-up after RRT, suggesting that these cancer cells might have a biological significance.
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