Context.—: The authors announce the launch of the Consortium for Analytic Standardization in Immunohistochemistry, funded with a grant from the National Cancer Institute. As with other laboratory testing, analytic standards are important for many different stakeholders: commercial vendors of instruments and reagents, biopharmaceutical firms, pathologists, scientists, clinical laboratories, external quality assurance organizations, and regulatory bodies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The Wilms' tumor antigen (WT1) is overexpressed in approximately 90% of breast tumors and, thus, is a potential target antigen for the immunotherapy of breast cancer. We have tested the working hypotheses that WT1 can be immunogenic in patients with breast cancer and can stimulate CTL of sufficient avidity to kill tumor cells.
Experimental Design: Paired tumor-draining lymph node and peripheral blood samples were analyzed from five HLA-A2-positive patients with stage I/II breast cancer.
In recent studies, Böcker and colleagues described a population of cells in paraffin wax sections of normal human breast that express cytokeratins (CK) 5/6 without expression of CK8/18 or smooth muscle actin (SMA). They proposed that these represent stem cells that give rise to differentiated luminal and myoepithelial cells. The data have been used to generate a model for breast cancer progression and classification with associated implications for management of pre-invasive disease.
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