Publication | Open Access
Detection of Point Mutations in the Kirsten-ras Oncogene Provides Evidence for the Multicentricity of Pancreatic Carcinoma
113
Citations
20
References
1993
Year
Tumor RecurrencePathologyTumor BiologyKi-ras Codon 12Pancreatic CancerPancreatic CarcinomaMolecular DiagnosticsRadiation OncologyCancer ResearchRadiologyHealth SciencesPoint MutationsOncogenic AgentMedicineCancer CellsCancer GeneticsSomatic VariantCancer GenomicsPancreatic SurgeryOncology
It has been reported that multicentricity of pancreatic carcinomas extending beyond the pancreatic duct occur in 15% to 40% of patients. This has been difficult to confirm, however, with currently available histologic techniques. Mutations in the Kirsten (Ki)-ras oncogene, which can be detected frequently in pancreatic carcinomas using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), may serve as a potential clonal marker of the cancer cells. Fifty-three patients with a histopathologic diagnosis of pancreatic carcinoma were selected for the determination of certain Ki-ras mutations through PCR. The authors identified mutations in the Ki-ras codon 12 in 46 of 53 tumors. Two of these 46 tumors had two different mutations to aspartic acid (GAT) and to valine (GTT) in Ki-ras codon 12. Another isolate had an additional mutation in Ki-ras codon 13. The detection of different mutations in the same tumor suggests that there may be multicentricity in pancreatic carcinomas and that its frequency may be as low as 6% of the carcinomas. These results imply that total pancreatectomy for eliminating tumor recurrence due to multicentricity may not be warranted.
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