Abstract

Steady state c-myc mRNA levels determined by Northern blot analysis were examined in non-Hodgkin's lymphomas (NHL) of both high (n = 29) and low malignancy (n = 18), and in non-specific chronic lymphadenitis (n = 6). High grade NHL, classified according to the updated Kiel classification, revealed significantly larger amounts of c-myc mRNA compared with low grade NHL and lymphadenitis. mRNA levels in non-specific lymphadenitis were lower than in low grade NHL, but the differences were not statistically significant. No correlation between c-myc mRNA levels and the immunologic phenotype was discernible. Growth fractions of the NHL were determined by immunostaining with the monoclonal antibody Ki-67. Significant correlations between the percentages of Ki-67-positive cells, as well as the amounts of c-myc mRNA, and classification into high or low grade NHL were found. However, the percentage of Ki-67 positive cells and c-myc mRNA levels in individual cases and in the various histologic entities of NHL did not correlate. Our results indicate the overexpression of the c-myc gene in NHL, and a highly significant correlation of steady state c-myc mRNA levels with the prognosis-related histomorphologic Kiel classification of NHL into different subgroups of low and high grade malignancy.

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