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.
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.
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.
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.