| Literature DB >> 11276007 |
W S Park1, R R Oh, J Y Park, P J Kim, M S Shin, J H Lee, H S Kim, S H Lee, S Y Kim, Y G Park, W G An, H S Kim, J J Jang, N J Yoo, J Y Lee.
Abstract
In this study, mutational and immunohistochemical analyses of beta-catenin were performed in 30 hepatoblastomas, to assess the prevalence of alterations of the Wnt pathway with respect to clinicopathological parameters and survival. Four missense mutations of beta-catenin (13.3%) were detected and there was strong immunoreactivity for beta-catenin in the cytoplasm and/or the nucleus in 97% of hepatoblastomas. Nuclear and cytoplasmic staining was demonstrated in 19 of 30 tumours (63%), while ten revealed only cytoplasmic staining. Statistically, this nuclear beta-catenin staining was significantly higher in the embryonal (Fisher exact test; p=0.00393) or undifferentiated type (p=0.00156) of hepatoblastoma than in the fetal type, but there was no difference between clinical stages I and II and clinical stages III and IV (p=0.175). Cumulative survival curves showed that nuclear beta-catenin staining (generalized Wilcoxon test; p=0.0088), undifferentiated histological type (p=0.0305), and clinical stages III and IV (p=0.0107) were significantly correlated with shorter survival time in these patients. Moreover, Cox multivariate analysis provides evidence that nuclear beta-catenin staining is the most important prognostic factor for survival (p=0.0090). It is therefore concluded that immunohistochemical analysis of beta-catenin might be a useful clinical tool for estimating the prognosis for patients with hepatoblastoma. Copyright 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11276007 DOI: 10.1002/1096-9896(2000)9999:9999<::aid-path804>3.0.co;2-r
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pathol ISSN: 0022-3417 Impact factor: 7.996