Summary Squamous cell lung carcinomas (SCC) from former employees of the Wismut uranium mining company (Saxony, Germany) were obtained from the Stollberg Archive in order to screen for p53 tumour suppressor gene codon 249 arg→met hotspot mutations, a putative molecular bio-dosimeter of alpha-particle (radon) exposure (Taylor et al (1994) Lancet 343: 86-87;McDonald et al (1995) Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prevent 4: 791-793). Of the 29 archived samples of SCC meeting quality criteria for DNA analysis by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and HaeIII restriction enzyme digestion, two tumours were found that harboured this mutation. DNA sequencing confirmed the presence of a G to T base substitution within the HaeIII site spanning codons 249 and 250 of the p53 gene that results in replacement of arginine (wild-type) by methionine at residue 249. When these data are combined with those from our previous study of tumours from the Stollberg Archive in which 50 lung tumours were examined, (including nine SCCs), we conclude that the G→T (arg→met) codon 249 mutation prevalence in the Wismut miner cohort is not sharply elevated in lung cancers in general (two mutations/79 tumours), or specifically in SCCs of the lung (two mutations/38 SCC) when compared to data from lung cancer patients with no reported occupational exposure to radon gas.
Micro-CT is feasible for quantitative information about restenosis following balloon angioplasty and stent implantation and has the potential to become a standard technique in many laboratories which will augment serial histology as the reference method for ex-vivo studies of restenosis.
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