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Showing papers by "Bruce E. Johnson published in 1992"


Journal Article
TL;DR: It is found that the ability of lung cancer patients to develop anti-p53 antibodies is correlated with the type of p53 mutation, but many patients have tumors with missense p53 mutations and did not develop anti, p53 antibodies.
Abstract: Using immunoblotting techniques we studied the sera from small cell lung cancer and non-small cell lung cancer patients for antibodies directed against p53. We have also characterized the majority of these patients' tumors for p53 mutations. In the sera of 13% of the patients (4 of 40 small cell lung cancer and 2 of 6 non-small cell lung cancer) we found antibodies specific for the p53 tumor suppressor gene product. All of the antibody-positive patients tested had p53 missense mutations and expressed detectable p53 antigen in their tumor cell lines. No anti-p53 antibodies were detected in sera from patients whose tumor had p53 stop, splice/stop, splice, or frameshift mutations (n = 10). Thus, while we find that the ability of lung cancer patients to develop anti-p53 antibodies is correlated with the type of p53 mutation, many patients have tumors with missense p53 mutations and did not develop anti-p53 antibodies. The presence of p53 antibodies was not correlated to stage, prior treatment, sex, or survival. None of these lung cancer patient sera had measurable amounts of p53 antigen. By immunoblotting all six anti-p53 antisera we were able to detect a variety of mutant p53 proteins (including those from antibody-negative patients) and detected wild-type p53 protein. The development of anti-p53 antibodies represents an interesting model system for studying immune responses in cancer patients against mutant oncogene products.

323 citations


Journal Article
01 Feb 1992-Oncogene
TL;DR: P53 mutations are found in SCLC with high frequency; p53 mutations in a significant fraction of cases generate cDNAs with nonsense or splicing mutations; and to date, these mutations have all been somatically acquired events.
Abstract: We analysed the p53 open reading frame (ORF) in 16 small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) cell lines by direct sequencing of cDNA/PCR products and in 20 SCLC tumors by chemical cleavage and single-strand conformation polymorphism analyses of genomic DNA/PCR products. Abnormalities of p53 were found in 16/16 cell lines (100%) and in 16/20 tumors (80%). In the SCLC cell lines, mutations (59% missense, 18% nonsense and 23% splicing) changing the coding sequence were dispersed between amino acids 68 and 342. In the tumor samples, while the mutations occurred predominantly in exons 5-8, other mutations were located outside these regions. G to T transversions were common, occurring in 32% of the cases. We found no p53 mutations in the corresponding normal tissue from 19 patients whose tumors had p53 lesions, indicating that the mutations were all somatically acquired. In analysing the clinical data of the patients we found no correlation between tumor response to therapy or survival and the location or type of mutations. We conclude from these data that: (1) p53 mutations are found in SCLC with high frequency; (2) p53 mutations in a significant fraction of cases generate cDNAs with nonsense or splicing mutations; and (3) to date, these mutations have all been somatically acquired events.

220 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A phase II evaluation of edatrexate in 17 previously untreated patients with advanced adenocarcinoma of the pancreas; 14 patients had at least one month of therapy, and no major responses were seen.
Abstract: We conducted a phase II evaluation of edatrexate in 17 previously untreated patients with advanced adenocarcinoma of the pancreas; 14 patients had at least one month of therapy. The initial dose was 80 mg/m2iv. Treatment was administered weekly for 5 weeks, then every other week. Toxicity was generally mild. The median WBC nadir was 5.4 (range 0.6–7.4)×103/μl, and the median platelet nadir was 164.0 (range 62.0–341.0)×103/μl. One patient died with sepsis and gastrointestinal bleeding associated with pancytopenia. Five patients had a mild rash. Nausea occurred in 6 patients, including 3 who had vomiting. In addition, 11 patients complained of vague malaise which seemed to begin within 24–48 hours after administration of edatrexate, and lasted for 2 to 3 days, resolving within 6 days of drug administration. Median survival was 85 days. Although 5 patients had stable disease, including one with relief of pain, no major responses were seen, excluding, with 95% confidence, a response rate in excess of 20%.

21 citations