Immunohistochemical analysis was performed to determine the clinical role of p53 mutations in patients with locally advanced esophageal carcinomas treated with concurrent chemoradiotherapy. The subjects of this study were 20 patients with previously untreated esophageal carcinomas with evidence of T4 disease and/or distant node metastases. Treatment comprised protracted 5-fluorouracil and 2-h cisplatinum infusions along with radiation treatment with a total radiation dose of 60 Gy. Tumor specimens from 18 of the 20 patients were analyzed immunohistochemically. Mutant p53 protein expression in the biopsy materials from the primary tumors was analyzed by immunohistochemical staining using a polyclonal antibody, RSP53. Expression of p53 was detected immunohistochemically in 10 (56%) of the 18 esophageal tumors, the cancer cell nuclei of which were diffusely stained. There were no significant differences between the patient backgrounds of the p53-"positive" and "negative" groups. Four (40%) of the 10 patients with p53 expression achieved overall complete remissions (CRSs) and 7 (70%) of these 10 achieved CRs of their primary tumors. In contrast, none of the 8 p53-negative patients achieved overall CRs and two (25%) achieved CRs of their primary tumors. The CR rates overall and of primary tumors tended to be higher in the p53-positive than negative group, but the differences were not significant. The survival rate for the 10 patients with p53 expression was better than that for the 8 negative ones (P>0.01): their median survival times were 12 and 4.5 months, respectively. Expression of p53 protein may be an indicator of a favorable prognosis in patients with locally advanced esophageal carcinomas treated with concurrent chemoradiotherapy.