| Literature DB >> 15339339 |
Galina Volgareva1, Larisa Zavalishina, Yulia Andreeva, Georgy Frank, Ella Krutikova, Darya Golovina, Alexander Bliev, Dimitry Spitkovsky, Valeriya Ermilova, Fjodor Kisseljov.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cervical carcinomas are second most frequent type of women cancer. Success in diagnostics of this disease is due to the use of Pap-test (cytological smear analysis). However Pap-test gives significant portion of both false-positive and false-negative conclusions. Amendments of the diagnostic procedure are desirable. Aetiological role of papillomaviruses in cervical cancer is established while the role of cellular gene alterations in the course of tumor progression is less clear. Several research groups including us have recently named the protein p16INK4a as a possible diagnostic marker of cervical cancer. To evaluate whether the specificity of p16INK4a expression in dysplastic and neoplastic cervical epithelium is sufficient for such application we undertook a broader immunochistochemical registration of this protein with a highly p16INK4a-specific monoclonal antibody.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15339339 PMCID: PMC517716 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-4-58
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Figure 1Different types of cervical cell staining with the p16INK4a-specific antibodies. a. Normal epithelium (smear): negative staining. b. CIN I (indicated with a dotted arrow) and cancer in situ (solid arrows): a very poor cytoplasmic staining in separate CIN I cells and sporadic staining in cancer in situ. c. Invasive squamous cell carcinoma. Diffuse cytoplasmic staining with the sole cell expressing p16INK4a in the nucleus (solid arrow). The boundary with adjoining normal tissue is marked with a dotted arrow. d. HT3 cells (smear) with both nuclear and cytoplasmic subcellular location of the positive staining.
Figure 2Cervical tissue samples after immunohistochemical staining with p16INK4a-specific antibodies. a. CIN I. Focal staining. b. CIN II. Negative staining. c. Cancer in situ (indicated with an arrow) and CIN III. Diffuse staining. d. CIN III. Negative staining. e. Squamous cell carcinoma. Negative staining. f. Squamous cell carcinoma. Diffuse staining. g. Squamous cell carcinoma embol. Diffuse staining. h. Adenocarcinoma. Diffuse staining.
p16INK4a EXPRESSION IN NORMAL, DYSPLASTIC AND NEOPLASTIC EPITHELIAL CELLS OF CERVIX UTERI
| STAINING* | ||||||
| MATERIALS | number of samples | negative | poor | sporadic | focal | diffuse |
| Normal epithelium (smears) | 6 | 6 (100) | - | - | - | - |
| Cervical ectopia including | 37 | 34 (91,9) | 3 (8,1) | - | - | - |
| C.e. + coilocytosis | 10 | 9 | 1 | - | - | - |
| C.e. + condyloma | 2 | 1 | 1 | - | - | - |
| Dysplasia: | ||||||
| CINs I | 51 | 32 (62,7) | 12 (23,5) | 6 (11,8) | 1 (2,0) | - |
| CINs II | 38 | 26 (68,4) | 7 (18,4) | 4 (10,5) | 1 (2,7) | - |
| CINs III including cancer in situ | 24 | 8 (33,3) | 3 (12,5) | 7 (29,2) | 2 (8,3) | 4 (16,7) |
| Invasive carcinomas including squamous cell carcinomas adenocarcinomas | 26 | 1 (3,8) | 1 (3,8) | 4 (15,5) | 7 (26,9) | 13 (50,0) |
| Squamous cell carcinomas | 21 | 1 (4,8) | 1 (4,8) | 3 (14,3) | 6 (28,5) | 10 (47,6) |
| Adenocarcinomas | 5 | - | - | 1 (20,0) | 1 (20,0) | 3 (60,0) |
* percent is given in parenthesis
Data on high risk HPV genome detection by PCR in CIN III and invasive squamous cell carcinoma samples
| Sample No | Type of immunochemical staining | HPV type |
| 1 | negative | 16 |
| 2 | negative | 18 |
| 3 | negative | 16 |
| 4 | poor | 16 |
| 5 | poor | 16 |
| 6 | poor | 16 |
| 7 | sporadic | 16 |
| 8 | sporadic | 16 |
| 9 | sporadic | 16 |
| 10 | sporadic | 16 |
| 11 | sporadic | 16 |
| 12 | sporadic | 16 |
| 13 | sporadic | 16 |
| 14 | focal | 16 |
| 15 | focal | 16 |
| 16 | diffuse | 16 |
| 17 | diffuse | 16 |
| 18 | diffuse | 18 |
| 19 | diffuse | 18 |
| 20 | negative | 16* |
| 21 | poor | 16* |
| 22 | sporadic | 16* |
| 23 | sporadic | 16 |
| 24 | sporadic | 16* |
| 25 | focal | 16* |
| 26 | focal | 16 |
| 27 | focal | 16 |
| 28 | focal | 18 |
| 29 | focal | 16 |
| 30 | focal | 16 |
| 31 | diffuse | 16 |
| 32 | diffuse | 16 |
| 33 | diffuse | 16 |
| 34 | diffuse | 66 |
| 35 | diffuse | 16 |
| 36 | diffuse | 16 |
| 37 | diffuse | 16 |
| 38 | diffuse | 16 |
| 39 | diffuse | 18 |
| 40 | diffuse | 16 + 18 |
* confirmed by Southern blotting
STAINING OF THE REFERENCE MATERIALS WITH p16INK4a-SPECIFIC MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES
| MATERIALS | number of samples | negative | poor | sporadic | focal | diffuse |
| Normal tissues, including | 12 | 12 | - | - | - | - |
| Uterus body (myometrium) | 1 | 1 | - | - | - | - |
| Stromal and glandular tissues of cervix uteri | 11 | 11 | - | - | - | - |
THE SHARE OF p16INK4a-NEGATIVE SAMPLES AMONG CERVICAL CARCINOMAS (LITERATURE DATA)
| Research group (reference) | The share (per cent) of p16INK4a-negative samples |
| among adenocarcinomas: | |
| Lu et al, 1998 (7) | 17/40 (42.5%) |
| Sano et al, 1998 (8) | 4/15 (26.7%) |
| Milde-Langosch et al, 2001(10) | 8/58 (13,8%) |
| Klaes et al, 2001(9) | 1/7 (14.3%) |
| Saqi et al, 2002 (13) | 0/2 (0%) |
| Murphy et al, 2003 (14) | 0/2 (0%) |
| Negri et al, 2003 (15) | 0/18 (0%) |
| Agoff et al, 2003 (16) | 2/7 (28.6 %) |
| Present study | 0/5 (0%) |
| among squamous cell carcinomas: | |
| Wong et al, 1997 (6) | 8/79 (10.1%) |
| Sano et al, 1998 (8) | 1/39 (2.8%) |
| Klaes et al, 2001 (9) | 1/53 (1.9%) |
| Sano et al, 2002 (12) | 0/34 (0%) |
| Klaes et al, 2002 (4) | 0/46 (0%) |
| Saqi et al, 2002 (13) | 0/1 (0 %) |
| Murphy et al, 2003 (14) | 0/8 (0%) |
| Agoff et al, 2003 (16) | 4/46 (8.7%) |
| Present study | 1/21 (4.8%) |