Korean J Hematol.  1999 May;34(2):297-305.

Clinical Significance of Plasma p53 Protein Level in Acute Leukemia

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Clinical Pathology, College of Medicine, The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mutation in the p53 gene occurs frequently in a wide spectrum of human malignancies and the mutant protein may prove to be a useful diagnostic or prognostic marker for acute leukemia. The aim of this study was evaluation of the clinical significance of plasma p53 levels in acute leukemia.
METHODS
Plasma p53 protein were measured by an enzyme linked immunosorbent assay in 136 acute leukemic patients and the results were compared with immunohistochemistry on the paraffin-embedded section in 78 cases. In 28 leukemia cases showing increased plasma p53 protein levels at diagnosis, follow-up plasma p53 levels were analysed and compared with morphologic findings of the bone marrow at the same time.
RESULTS
(1) In immunohistochemistry, 22 of 78 cases (28%) revealed positive results for p53 protein. (2) Initially positive plasma p53 protein levels were detected in 40 out of 136 (29.4%). There was a moderate agreement (kappa factors 0.3-0.4) between the immunohistochemistry and ELISA results. All 13 cases in which initial positive p53 results were converted to negative at follow-up analysis revealed complete remission. Positive plasma p53 protein levels were converted to negative before the follow-up bone marrow examination in all six cases (acute myeoid leukemia 4 cases, acute lymphocytic leukemia 2 cases) which were analysed serially. (3) The poor prognostic factors reveal no statistically significant difference between the positive and negative plasma p53 groups.
CONCLUSION
The results suggest that analysis of plasma p53 level in acute leukemia is a useful test to predict complete remission in addition to the bone marrow examination. Especially, we may expect that all the acute leukemia cases showing positive plasma p53 level at diagnosis and converted to negative level during chemotherapy will enter complete remission.

Keyword

P53 immunohistochemistry; Plasma p53 protein; Acute leukemia; ELISA

MeSH Terms

Bone Marrow
Bone Marrow Examination
Diagnosis
Drug Therapy
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
Follow-Up Studies
Genes, p53
Humans
Immunohistochemistry
Leukemia*
Mutant Proteins
Plasma*
Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma
Mutant Proteins
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