It was found that the risk of E-cadherin hypermethylation was 1.347-fold, while risk of p15 hypermethylation was 1.543-fold and p16 was 1.2-fold among patients with ovarian cancer than that among patients with benign ovarian lesions.
Our meta-analysis included eight eligible studies, with 428 ovarian cancers and 278 normal tissue samples and benign neoplasms. p16 promoter methylation was identified in 5.4 to 43.2% (median 27.86%) of ovarian cancers and 0 to 37.5% (median 15.8%) of normal tissue and benign neoplasms indicating that no significant association exists between p16 promoter methylation and epithelial ovarian cancer.
The present study aimed to examine the associations between the protein and mRNA expression levels of ovarian cancer gene 1 (OVCA1), cyclin D1 and p16 and high-risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV) infection in cervical lesions.
This study demonstrates that the p16 gene plays a role in the progression of human ovarian cancers and the blood DNA methylation of p16 gene promoter region is a weak predictor of tumor tissue methylation status.
To investigate both the presence of numerical abnormalities of chromosome 9 and p16 gene alterations in ovarian cancer, we studied 28 cases by the fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) technique using a DNA p16 probe and an a-satellite probe specific for chromosome 9.