Y. Yoshida et al., A COMPARATIVE-STUDY ON HEPATOCELLULAR-CARCINOMA BETWEEN SOUTH-AFRICANS AND JAPANESE FROM THE VIEWPOINT OF NUCLEAR-DNA CONTENT, British Journal of Cancer, 69(2), 1994, pp. 362-366
Nuclear deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) content of hepatocellular carcinom
a (HCC) in 41 South African and 47 Japanese patients at autopsy was an
alysed by dual-wavelength microspectrophotometry. The DNA distribution
patterns were classified as type I, II, III or IV and as low ploidy (
types I, II) or high ploidy (types III, IV), according to the degree o
f dispersion. We found a significantly higher incidence of high ploidy
in South African HCC than in Japanese HCC. Moreover, type IV was sign
ificantly more frequent among South Africans than among the Japanese.
These findings demonstrate that large differences in biological charac
teristics and clinical behaviour of HCC between South Africa and Japan
may reflect differences in DNA distribution patterns which we observe
d between these two races.