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Gene defect may yield cancer prognosis.


Following a routine mammogram mammogram /mam·mo·gram/ (mam´o-gram) a radiograph of the breast.

mam·mo·gram
n.
An x-ray image of the breast produced by mammography.
 and biopsy of a suspect area in her breast, a 55-year-old woman learns she has breast cancer. After removing the tumor, her doctor tells her the cancer was at a very early stage and has not spread, so she stands a good chance of beating the disease.

Nonetheless, the cancer quickly and aggressively reappears.

Physicians caring for breast cancer patients know this scenario only too well: Cancers can recur with a vengeance, even when all indicators give a good prognosis.

Researchers from Minnesota and California have found that breast cancer tumors with mutations in the p53 gene recur more quickly, and prove more deadly, than tumors with normal copies of the gene. This finding could one day help "physicians identify patients who, despite lack of conventional indicators of poor prognosis, are at high risk of early recurrence and death," says study collaborator Arndt Hartmann of the Mayo Clinic Mayo Clinic: see Mayo, Charles Horace.

Mayo Clinic

voluntary association of more than 500 physicians in Rochester, Minnesota. [Am. Hist.: EB, 11: 723]

See : Medicine
 and Foundation in Rochester, Minn.

Tumors with a mutated p53 gene produce an inactive version of the p53 tumor suppressor sup·pres·sor  
n.
1. or sup·press·er One that suppresses: a suppressor of free speech.

2. A gene that suppresses the phenotypic expression of another gene, especially of a mutant gene.
 protein. Scientists suspected that such tumors could be very aggressive. In fact, previous studies have indicated that tumors with p53 mutations tend to resist radiation treatment and many anticancer drugs Anticancer Drugs Definition

Anticancer, or antineoplastic, drugs are used to treat malignancies, or cancerous growths. Drug therapy may be used alone, or in combination with other treatments such as surgery or radiation therapy.
.

Hartmann and his colleagues followed 97 women with breast cancer for an average of 2 years. The researchers compared recurrence and survival rates to conventional indicators, such as the spread of tumors to lymph nodes Lymph nodes
Small, bean-shaped masses of tissue scattered along the lymphatic system that act as filters and immune monitors, removing fluids, bacteria, or cancer cells that travel through the lymph system.
 and the absence of estrogen receptors estrogen receptor A protein of a superfamily of nuclear receptors for small hydrophilic ligands–eg, steroid hormones, thyroid hormone, vitamin D, retinoids; the presence of ERs in breast CA generally is associated with a better prognosis, as they respond to , as well as to the presence of p53 mutations. Mutations provided the only reliable predictor of poor prognosis.

Hartmann points out that the researchers need to confirm their findings in a much larger group of patients before p53 mutations should be used to determine prognosis.
COPYRIGHT 1995 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1995, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Science News
Date:Nov 4, 1995
Words:288
Previous Article:The xeno-solution. (animal-to-human organ transplants)(includes related article)
Next Article:Early cancer linked to enzyme lack. (glutathione-S-transferase theta)
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