Abstract

The monoclonal antibody anti-Ki67 is used to detect proliferating cells, but its main limitation is the requirement of fresh-frozen material. On a series of patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, we used a Ki67 equivalent monoclonal antibody, the recently proposed MIB-1, on formalin-fixed histopathological material using microwave antigen retrieval. MIB-1 expression was analysed in relation to other proliferation indices, such as autoradiographic H-thymidine labelling index (HTL1) and flow cytometric S-phase cell fraction (FCM-S) and to pathological status. Moreover, the prognostic relevance of the cell kinetic indices was defined in uni- and multivariate analyses including histology and tumour stage. The relationship between MIB-1 index and the other proliferation indices was statistically significant even though the correlation coefficient was around 0.6. The MIB-1 index was also related to the REAL (Revised European American Lymphoma) classification, but not to the Ann Arbor stage classification. Univariate analysis showed that the MIB-1 index was a significant predictor of 6-year survival in the overall series and in distinctly analysed low-grade and high-grade lymphoma subgroups. With regard to S-phase indices, HTLI was a powerful prognosticator in patients with high-grade histologies and FCM-S in patients with low-grade histologies. Multivariate analyses revealed that MIB-1 index, HTLI and FCM-S retained their prognostic significance independent of histology. In conclusion, the MIB-1 antibody provides prognostic information in non-Hodgkin's lymphomas and has the main advantage that it can be used in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded specimens.

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