Heat shock proteins (hsps) occupy a central role in the regulation of intracellular homeostasis, and differential expression of individual hsps occurs in a broad range of neoplastic processes. This study was performed to test the hypothesis that the particular patterns by which individual hsps become specifically modulated in human prostate cancers are correlated with behavioral phenotype and hence may be of value in determining the most appropriate clinical management of individual patients. Monoclonal antibodies specific for each hsp protein were used to assess expression of hsp27, hsp60, and hsp70 in formalin-fixed, paraffin wax-embedded, archival tissue specimens of early prostatic adenocarcinomas (pT1-2N0M0) removed at radical prostatectomy (n = 25) and in advanced cancers (n = 95) identified at transurethral resection of prostate (TURP). These findings were compared with similar data from control prostates (n = 10) removed at primary cystectomy for urinary bladder neoplasia not involving the prostate and also at TURP for benign prostatic hyperplasia (n = 50). Western blotting of whole cell lysates derived from established human prostatic epithelial cell lines PNT2, LNCaP, DU145, and PC3 was compared with expression of hsps by the primary human tissues. This study found that early in situ neoplastic transformation of normal prostatic epithelium was consistently associated with loss of hsp27 expression and that the level of hsp27 expression by individual prostate cancers was correlated with their Gleason grade. In advanced cancers, hsp27 expression was invariably associated with poor clinical outcome (P = 0.0001). Data from cell lines supported the primary tissue findings, with elevated hsp27 expression only in aggressive malignant cell lines and androgen-insensitive cell lines. Expression of hsp60 was significantly increased in both early and advanced prostate cancer when compared with nonneoplastic prostatic epithelium (P < 0.0001), as well as in malignant prostate cancer cell lines. Expression of hsp70 was unaltered in early prostate cancers when compared with nonneoplastic prostatic epithelium but showed a diminished expression in morphologically advanced cancers (P = 0.0029). No consistent correlation was found between levels of hsp60 or hsp70 expression and phenotypic behavior of individual primary prostatic cancers. Thus, patterns of hsp expression have been confirmed to be specifically and consistently modulated in both early and advanced human prostate cancers. Whereas absence of hsp27 is a reliable objective marker of early prostatic neoplasia, reexpression of this protein by an individual invasive prostatic carcinoma invariably heralds poor clinical prognosis. Because this protein has been shown to alter the balance between proliferation and apoptosis, understanding the mechanism(s) by which individual hsps regulate intracellular homeostasis may assist in explaining some key processes that occur during evolution of human prostate cancers. We suggest that hsp27 expression provides novel diagnostic and prognostic information on individual patient survival which, if obtained at the time of primary diagnosis, would assist in determining tumor-specific management strategies. Development of techniques to therapeutically modulate hsp27 expression raises the possibility of novel targeted approaches to regulate this homeostatic mechanism, thus allowing better control over tumor cell proliferation and hence patient survival.