Universidad de Murcia, Departamento de Biologia Celular e Histiologia
Abstract
Background. TP53 mutation is a poor
prognostic factor for various organ malignancies such as
colorectal cancer, breast cancer, ovarian cancer,
hepatocellular carcinoma, lung adenocarcinoma and
clinical pathologists previously evaluated it using
immunohistochemistry for p53. The clinicopathologic
significance of p53 expression in gastric cancer remains
unclear due to inconsistent classification methods.
Methods. Immunohistochemistry for p53 protein
was performed using tissue microarray blocks generated
from 725 cases of gastric cancer, and p53 expression
was divided into three staining patterns using a semiquantitative ternary classifier: heterogeneous (wild type),
overexpression, and absence (mutant pattern).
Results. Mutant pattern of p53 expression had a
male predominance, greater frequency in cardia/fundus,
higher pT stage, frequent lymph node metastasis, local
recurrence clinically, and more differentiated histology
microscopically compared with wild type. In survival
analysis, p53 mutant pattern was associated with worse
recurrent-free survival and overall survival rates, and
significance was maintained in subgroup analysis of
early versus advanced gastric cancers. In Cox regression
analysis, p53 mutant pattern was a significant predicting
factor for local recurrence (relative risk (RR=4.882,
p<0.001)) and overall survival (RR=2.040, p=0.007).
The p53 mutant pattern remained significant for local
recurrence (RR=2.934, p=0.018) in multivariate
analyses.
Conclusions. Mutant p53 pattern on immunohistochemistry was a significant prognostic factor for
local recurrence and poor overall survival in gastric
cancer