Publications by authors named "K A Delacey"

Frequent allelic imbalance of polymorphic markers mapped to regions of the 7q, 8p, 16q, and 18q arms has been reported in prostate cancer. To better define the clinical significance of these genetic alterations, we undertook a retrospective analysis of systemic progression and survival in patients with a single stage of prostate cancer. We ascertained all 227 patients from the Mayo Clinic Radical Prostatectomy Registry who had a histologic high-grade, pathologic stage C (pT3N0M0) tumor surgically removed between 1966 and 1987.

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Cytogenetic analyses have demonstrated that chromosome region 7q22-32 is commonly altered in prostate adenocarcinomas. In addition, in recent fluorescence in situ hybridization studies, we have observed that aneusomy of chromosome 7 is frequent in prostate cancer and is associated with higher tumor grade, advanced pathological stage, and early prostate cancer death. These findings suggest that genetic alterations of chromosome 7 play a significant role in the development of prostate cancer.

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The presence of retinoblastoma (RB) protein was evaluated by immunohistochemical staining and correlated with loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the RB locus in 52 primary epithelial ovarian carcinomas. Forty-eight tumors were informative at the RB locus by molecular genetic analysis. Twenty-five tumors (52%) showed loss of heterozygosity at the RB locus.

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Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) studies were performed to investigate the genetic differences which separate low-grade (LG), high-grade (HG), and borderline epithelial ovarian carcinomas. Fresh tumor samples and blood were obtained from 58 patients (20 LG, 34 HG, and 4 borderline tumor specimens) undergoing surgery for ovarian carcinoma at Mayo Clinic. Tumors were graded using a modified Broder's classification with invasive grades 1 and 2 considered LG, invasive grades 3 and 4 considered HG, and tumors with no evidence of stromal invasion classified as borderline.

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