Japanese Journal of Cancer Research GANN
Print ISSN : 0910-5050
HUMAN EPIDERMAL GROWTH FACTOR IN GASTRIC CARCINOMA AS A BIOLOGIC MARKER OF HIGH MALIGNANCY
Eiichi TAHARAHiromichi SUMIYOSHIJotaro HATAWataru YASUIKiyomi TANIYAMATomonori HAYASHIShinji NAGAEShunji SAKAMOTO
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1986 Volume 77 Issue 2 Pages 145-152

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Abstract

The presence of human epidermal growth factor (hEGF) was studied in a total of 210 gastric carcinomas comprising 52 early carcinomas, 113 advanced carcinomas and 45 scirrhous carcinomas. An immunohistochemical study revealed no hEGF-immunoreactivity in early gastric carcinomas, while hEGF-positive tumor cells were detected in 24 (21.2%) of the 113 advanced carcinomas and in 15 (33.3%) of the 45 scirrhous carcinomas. The incidence of hEGF-immunoreactivity in well-differentiated adenocarcinomas was significantly higher than that in poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas (P<0.05). Moreover, hEGF-immunoreactive tumor cells were observed in 13 (30.4%) of the 42 scirrhous poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas, the incidence being significantly higher than that in non-scirrhous poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas (P<0.05). The average hEGF content in the tumor tissue estimated by radioimmunoassay was 3.77±0.61 (mean±SE) ng/g wet weight in immunohistochemical hEGF-positive tumors and 2.19±0.18ng/g wet weight in hEGF-negative tumors, the difference being significant (P<0.05). Patients with hEGF-positive carcinomas (excluding scirrhous carcinomas) had much worse prognosis than those with hEGF-negative carcinomas. These results suggest that EGF produced by tumor cells plays an important role in the invasive growth and productive fibrosis of gastric carcinoma and also serves as a biologic marker of high malignancy in patients with gastric cancers.

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© The Japanese Cancer Association
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