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Serum DNA and urine DNA alterations of urinary transitional cell bladder carcinoma detected by fluorescent microsatellite analysis

โœ Scribed by Rolf von Knobloch; Axel Hegele; Heidrun Brandt; Peter Olbert; Axel Heidenreich; Rainer Hofmann


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2001
Tongue
French
Weight
102 KB
Volume
94
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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โœฆ Synopsis


There are no reliable serologic tumor markers for transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) of the urinary bladder and noninvasive urine investigations are inadequate. We used fluorescent microsatellite analysis (MSA) to detect serum DNA and urine-sediment DNA alterations in patients with bladder cancer and prospectively collected fresh tumor, peripheral blood, serum and spontaneous urine specimens from 39 consecutive patients treated for TCC of the bladder to obtain the corresponding DNA. Fluorescent MSA was performed with 17 polymorphic markers from the chromosomal regions 5q, 8p, 9p, 9q, 13q, 14q, 17p, 17q and 20q in the 39 cancer patients and in 10 healthy controls. Serum DNA alterations were identified in 84.5% (33 of 39 patients) and tumor-specific urine DNA alterations indicating the diagnosis were present in 72% (27 of 39 patients) of cases. None of the healthy controls displayed serum DNA alterations. The highest frequency of serum DNA aberrations (56%) was detected for chromosomal region 8p. The most frequent alterations in urine-sediment DNA, 36% and 26%, were detected in chromosomal regions 8p and 9p, respectively. Identification of serum DNA and urine-sediment DNA alterations was not related to stage of disease or grade of tumor (p > 0.05). Thus, MSA offers a highly sensitive and specific method for serumand urine-bound diagnosis of bladder TCC.


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High frequency of serum DNA alterations
โœ Rolf von Knobloch; Axel Hegele; Heidrun Brandt; Zoltan Varga; Sebastian Wille; T ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2002 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ French โš– 117 KB

## Abstract To date there are no reliable serological markers for renal cell carcinoma (RCC). We applied fluorescent microsatellite analysis (MSA) to detect serum DNA alterations in patients with RCC. Fresh tumour, peripheral blood and serum specimens from 60 consecutive patients treated for malign