Previous reports have shown that Her-2/neu oncogene expression in human breast cancer and ovarian cancer may be associated with poorer prognosis. We report the expression of Her-2/neu on fresh samples of known prostatic adenocarcinoma but not on those of benign prostatic hypertrophy. Using a monoclonal antibody (TA1) directed against human Her-2/neu oncogene product and an immunohistochemical staining method, no Her-2/neu expression was noted with benign prostatic hypertrophy (15 samples). With prostatic adenocarcinoma samples, a subset (9 of 25) showed overexpression of Her-2/neu. Such overexpression is correlated with higher histological grade, higher stage of disease, and high S phase and aneuploidy on flow cytometric analysis. These findings suggest that Her-2/neu may be a prognostic marker in prostate cancer as well.
The expression of the mutant p53 tumor suppressor gene was evaluated in 33 human prostate carcinomas. Using an immunohistochemical method with monoclonal antibodies PAb 1801 and PAb 240, 26 (79%) tumors demonstrated positive immunostaining for mutant p53. Only areas of glandular tumor were positive, with adjacent stromal elements and areas of glandular hyperplasia being negative. The predominant staining pattern was cytoplasmic. This pattern may be related to p53 binding to certain heat shock proteins (HSP 72/73), as a monoclonal antibody to these proteins demonstrated a cytoplasmic location as well. These results demonstrate that abnormal p53 expression is a frequent event in prostate cancer.
During the winter of 1993, medical oncologists from an urban, university-based hospital provided oncology care to rural patients using interactive video clinics (tele-oncology). In order to assess physician satisfaction with this form of outreach, surveys were performed after the video encounters, as well as after a limited number of subsequent clinical encounters on site. Various aspects of satisfaction were evaluated. Although the sample was small (a total of 41 clinical encounters and 3 oncologists), the results suggested that there was a reasonable level of physician satisfaction with, and confidence in, the use of video to replace some on-site oncology consultations. A definitive study of tele-oncology for providing care to rural cancer patients therefore appears to be warranted.
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