| Literature DB >> 12442919 |
Anna Gasinska1, Krzysztof Urbanski, Agnieszka Adamczyk, Jacek Pudelek, Bengt K Lind, Anders Brahme.
Abstract
The prognostic significance of intratumour microvessel density (IMD) and haemoglobin (Hb) level was studied in 152 (FIGO stage IB-IIIB) cervical cancer patients before radiotherapy. Patients' age and tumour stage, grade and degree of keratinization were also studied. IMD measurement expressed as the mean vessel count per 1 mm2 was performed on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumour biopsies stained with anti-factor VIII antibody (DAKO Ltd.) using immunohistochemistry and the vascular hot-spot technique. The median age of patients was 55 years (29-80). Median values for IMD and Hb level were: 142.5 (range 56.3-476.6) vessels/mm2 and 129 (range 81-160) gil, respectively. The median time of follow-up was 26 months, with a range of 2-145 months. Tumour stage (p = 0.7009), grade (p = 0.6660) and degree of keratinization (0.2669) were not significant in the Kaplan-Meier univariate analysis. However, patients' age > 50 years (p = 0.0079). high vascularity (IMD > 190.0 vessels/mm2, minimal cut-off point, p = 0.0503) and Hb concentration > 116 g/l (p = 0.0213) were favourable prognostic factors for cervical cancer treated with radiotherapy. In the Cox multivariate analysis only higher vascularity (IMD > 190/mm2 and Hb concentration > 116 g/l were favourable prognostic factors in terms of patients' survival. However, when a Cox analysis was done separately for keratinizing and non-keratinizing tumours, it was found that higher vascularity was significant only for keratinizing, and higher Hb level only for non-keratinizing cancers.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12442919 DOI: 10.1080/028418602320405023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Oncol ISSN: 0284-186X Impact factor: 4.089