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Characterisation of breast cancer infiltrates using monoclonal antibodies to human leucocyte antigens

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Abstract

Serial frozen sections from eleven patients with malignant breast tumours and five patients with benign disease were studied by indirect immunoperoxidase using a panel of mouse monoclonal antibodies to human leucocyte antigens. More infiltrating leucocytes were seen in tumour sections than those of benign conditions. A considerable proportion of the infiltrating cells were T cells, and more of these were of the suppressor/cytotoxic subset than the helper/inducer subset. The T cells were apparently not all activated as indicated by lower levels of staining with anti HLA-DR than anti-leucocyte antibody. Diffuse staining was sometimes seen with HLA-DR and T cell subset antibodies. Tumour cells did not stain or were only very weakly positive with anti HLA-A, B, C.

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Rowe, D., Beverley, P. Characterisation of breast cancer infiltrates using monoclonal antibodies to human leucocyte antigens. Br J Cancer 49, 149–159 (1984). https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1984.27

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/bjc.1984.27

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