Abstract

Objectives. Major histocompatibility complex antigens are mandatory for the immune response, and a genetic imbalance may be linked to tumor escape. We have previously characterized a cluster of ovarian cancer patients with high incidence of HLA-A2. To find a prognostic relevance, the presence of HLA-A2 was correlated to defined clinical parameters. Methods. A population-based set of 97 patients with confirmed epithelial ovarian cancer were recorded in a database by age, histology, stage, surgery and treatment. At the time the study was initiated, the majority of the patients were not alive and HLA-A2 expression was therefore determined by PCR/sequence-specific oligonucleotide hybridization using DNA extracted from paraffin-imbedded tissue specimens. Results. 88 patients with a median age of 65 years (36–87) could be evaluated. 44% were serous adenocarcinomas, 28% endometrioid, 6% mucinous, 13% clear cell carcinomas, 7% undifferentiated and 2% other epithelial tumors. Stages I–II comprised 33% and stages III–IV 67%. In stages III–IV and serous histology, 73% were HLA-A2 positive. Cox analysis, in this group, showed high univariate (HR7.16; CI 2.04–25.03; P = 0.002) and multivariate (HR 6.8; CI 2.10–22.4; P = 0.001) Hazard Ratios. None of the HLA-A2 positive patients survived 5 years, compared to more than 50% of the HLA-A2 negative patients. Conclusions. HLA-A2 is a negative factor for survival in women with serous adenocarcinomas of the ovary in stages III–IV. This finding has implications for clinical patient management. Association with known oncogenes needs further analysis.

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