“…Although EGFR was shown to have no independent prognostic significance in advanced cancer (Baekelandt et al, 1999), the EGFR and HER2/neu were frequently overexpressed in malignant tumours. Recent microassay analysis revealed that amplification of EGFR gene was found in many tumours including ovarian cancer (Lei et al, 1999), glioblastoma (Hui et al, 2001), pancreatic cancer (Bruell et al, 2003;Schreiner et al, 2003), gastric cancer (Garcia et al, 2003), prostate cancer (Skacel et al, 2001), and lung adenocarcinoma and head/ neck squamous cell carcinoma (Haedicke et al, 2003;Shintani et al, 2003), suggesting that overexpression of EGFR may be linked to the oncogenesis of various cancers. High level of EGFR expression also correlates with increased tumour resistance to radiation (Shintani et al, 2003), suggesting that EGFR may mediate radioresistance of cancer cells (Liang et al, 2003).…”