Abstract

Tumor proliferation in bladder cancer is associated with tumor behavior. To assess the association between Ki-67 labeling index (LI), p53, and c- erbB-2 overexpression, formalin-fixed tissue samples of 160 patients with transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the urinary bladder were studied by immunohistochemistry. Ki-67 LI was strongly associated with tumor stage ( P < .0001), tumor grade ( P < .0001), and p53 status ( P = .0014) but not with erbB-2 overexpression ( P > .2). Ki-67 LI was higher in p53-positive tumors (19%) than in p53-negative tumors (14%) when all stages were compared. Ki-67 LI was independent of p53 expression in pTa tumors (p53-positive, 9%; p53-negative, 11%), showing that p53 overexpression alone is not sufficient to induce rapid tumor cell proliferation in pTa tumors. Ki-67 LI also was independent of p53 expression in pT2 to pT4 tumors (p53-positive, 20%; p53-negative, 23%), indicating that p53 expression is not necessary for rapid tumor cell proliferation in advanced stages. However, there was a striking difference in Ki-67 LI between p53-positive pT1 tumors (22.0% ± 8.8 standard deviation [SD]; n = 20) and p53-negative pT1 tumors (9.7 ± 8.3 SD; n = 22; P = .0001). These results suggest that increased proliferation in p53-positive pT1 tumors is caused by additional alterations that occur during tumor progression.

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