SummaryThe role and prognostic value of the tumour suppressor p21/WAF1 expression in epithelial ovarian cancer has not yet been defined. Therefore, the expression of p21/WAF1 was assessed immunohistochemically (IHC) in 316 epithelial ovarian malignancies in relation to p53, cell proliferation and patient survival. p21/WAF1 expression was inversely correlated with p53 and cell proliferation. Low p21/WAF1 expression was significantly associated with high grade of the tumour (P = 0.0005), advanced FIGO stage (P = 0.001) and primary residual tumour (P = 0.0001). Low p21/WAF1 expression was a marker of poor overall survival (P = 0.012). Similarly, p53-positivity and high cell proliferative activity were significant predictors of poor survival in univariate analyses. Moreover, the patients with p21-/p53+ tumours had a poorer overall (P < 0.00005) and recurrence-free (P = 0.0005) survival in univariate analyses, and the p21/p53 expression independently predicted tumour recurrence in Cox's multivariate analysis. Our results suggest that p21/WAF1 expression is mostly p53-dependent in epithelial ovarian cancer. High p21/WAF1 expression seems to function as a negative cell cycle regulator and as a marker of favourable disease outcome in epithelial ovarian cancer. In addition, the patients with their tumour expressing no or low p21/WAF1 protein but positive for p53 had a notably higher risk of recurrent disease, implicating that these patients might be more prone to treatment failures.
The 52-kDa activator protein (AP)-2 is a DNA-binding transcription factor which has been reported to have growth inhibitory effects in cancer cell lines and in human tumours. In this study the expression of AP-2α was analysed in 303 epithelial ovarian carcinomas by immunohistochemistry (IHC) with a polyclonal AP-2α antibody and its mRNA status was determined by in situ hybridization (ISH) and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The immunohistochemical expression of AP-2α was correlated with clinicopathological variables, p21/WAF1 protein expression and survival. In normal ovaries, epithelial cells expressed AP-2α protein only in the cytoplasm. In carcinomas nuclear AP-2α expression was observed in 28% of the cases although cytoplasmic expression was more common (51%). The expression of AP-2α varied according to the histological subtype and differentiation. AP-2α and p21/WAF1 expressions did not correlate with each other. Both in univariate (P = 0.002) and multivariate analyses (relative risks (RR) 1.6, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.13–2.18, P = 0.007) the high cytoplasmic AP-2α expression favoured the overall survival. In contrast, the nuclear AP-2α expression combined with low cytoplasmic expression increased the risk of dying of ovarian cancer (RR = 2.10, 95% CI 1.13–3.83, P = 0.018). The shift in the expression pattern of AP-2α (nuclear vs cytoplasmic) in carcinomas points out to the possibility that this transcription factor may be used by oncogenes in certain histological subtypes. Based on the mRNA analyses, the incomplete expression and translation of AP-2α in ovarian cancer may be due to post-transcriptional regulation. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaign
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