Retrospective study of the correlation between the DNA repair protein alkyltransferase and survival of brain tumor patients treated with carmustine

Michael Belanich, Monica Pastor, Terri Randall, Denise Guerra, Jeannie Kibitel, Lori Alas, Ben Li, Marc Citron, Patricia Wasserman, Agnes White, Harmon Eyre, Kurt Jaeckle, Susan Schulman, Dori Rector, Michael Prados, Stephen Coons, William Shapiro, Daniel Yarosh

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

241 Scopus citations

Abstract

We tested the hypothesis that the level of the DNA repair protein O6- alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase in brain tumors was correlated with resistance to carmustine (BCNU) chemotherapy. Alkyltransferase levels in individual cells in sections from 167 primary brain tumors treated with BCNU were quantitated with an immunofluorescence assay using monoclonal antibodies against human alkyltransferase. Patients with high levels of alkyltransferase had shorter time to treatment failure (P = 0.05) and death (P = 0.004) and a death rate 1.7 times greater than patients with low alkyltransferase levels. Furthermore, the size of the subpopulation of cells with high levels of alkyltransferase was correlated directly with drug resistance. For all tumors the variables most closely correlated with survival, in order of importance, were age, tumor grade, and alkyltransferase levels. For glioblastoma multiforme, survival was more strongly correlated with alkyltransferase levels than with age. These results should encourage prospective studies to evaluate alkyltransferase levels as a method for identifying brain tumor patients with the best likelihood of response to BCNU chemotherapy.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)783-788
Number of pages6
JournalCancer research
Volume56
Issue number4
StatePublished - Feb 15 1996

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Oncology
  • Cancer Research

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