Shiao Y H, Chen V W, Wu X C, Scheer W D, Lehmann H P, Malcom G T, Boudreau D A, Ruiz B, Correa P
Laboratory of Comparative Carcinogenesis. NCI-FCRDC, NIH, Frederick, MD 21702, USA.
In Vivo. 1996 Mar-Apr;10(2):169-73.
A significant difference in breast cancer survival between blacks and whites has been observed in the United States. Biological variation between races has been suggested to explain the difference. We investigated the difference by comparing the prognostic value of p53 alterations (mutations and protein accumulation) between black and white breast cancer patients. Black, but not white, patients with p53 mutations had a significantly poorer survival than those without p53 mutations (p < 0.05). In contrast, white, but not black, patients having tumors with p53 protein accumulation tended to have a poorer survival than those without accumulation of p53 protein (p = 0.058). Among patients who died of breast cancer, blacks were often to have p53 mutations without protein accumulation, and whites frequently had p53 protein accumulation without mutations. The racial disparities in the associations of p53 alterations with breast cancer survival could have clinical implications in terms of treatment management.
在美国,已观察到黑人和白人乳腺癌患者的生存率存在显著差异。有人提出种族间的生物学差异可解释这一差异。我们通过比较黑人和白人乳腺癌患者中p53改变(突变和蛋白积累)的预后价值来研究这一差异。有p53突变的黑人患者(而非白人患者)的生存率显著低于无p53突变的患者(p < 0.05)。相比之下,肿瘤有p53蛋白积累的白人患者(而非黑人患者)的生存率往往低于无p53蛋白积累的患者(p = 0.058)。在死于乳腺癌的患者中,黑人常发生无蛋白积累的p53突变,而白人则常出现无突变的p53蛋白积累。p53改变与乳腺癌生存率之间的种族差异可能对治疗管理具有临床意义。