C. Shiga et al., PROGNOSTIC SIGNIFICANCE OF HST-1 GENE AMPLIFICATION IN PRIMARY ESOPHAGEAL CARCINOMAS AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER PROGNOSTIC FACTORS, Anticancer research, 14(2B), 1994, pp. 651-656
We studied hst-1 gene amplification in 50 primary human esophageal car
cinomas using Southern blot analysis. We found 3- to 9-fold amplificat
ion of the hst-1 gene in 15 out of 50 (30.0%) DNA samples from primary
tumors. There was no evidence of a correlation between hst-1 gene amp
lification and several prognostic factors other than the histological
type; hst-1 gene amplification was more common in well differentiated
squamous cell carcinoma. Survival rates for patients bearing tumors wi
th and without hst-1 gene amplification were calculated by the Kaplan-
Meier method and evaluated by the log-rank test. The survival curves f
or the two groups were almost identical. These results suggest that am
plification of the hst-1 gene is a poor indicator of the prognosis of
patients who have undergone surgery for primary esophageal carcinoma.