Literature DB >> 28187036

A Brief Report of Immunohistochemical Markers to Identify Aggressive Hepatoblastoma.

Vivekanand Singh1, Michelle Manalang2, Meenal Singh3, Udayan Apte3.   

Abstract

Hepatoblastoma (HB) is the most common malignant liver tumor in children. Although survival of patients has improved significantly over the last 2 decades, a significant number of patients do not respond to standard chemotherapy. We conducted a pilot study to understand if there was immunophenotypic difference between tumors that respond well to chemotherapy versus that do not. We selected 10 cases of HB from children presenting at our hospital. All patients had initial tissue diagnosis, underwent chemotherapy followed by surgical resection. The cases were divided into 2 groups: aggressive group with 5 cases (all of which had a poor response to chemotherapy); and a good clinical outcome group with 5 cases (all of which responded well to chemotherapy). We excluded the small cell variant of HB from the study because its poor clinical outcome is well known. To be placed in the aggressive group we used the following criteria: <70% necrosis following chemotherapy or recurrence/distant metastasis following chemotherapy. From tissue obtained before chemotherapy, 1 representative block of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue was selected for immunohistochemistry. Following review of published literature, antibodies were selected to detect Survivin, PLK-1, Cytokeratin19 (CK19), N-Myc, Yap, Notch2, Hes1, Hes5, and C-Myc. Our results show that Survivin, CK19, and Yap have a diffuse (>75%) positive staining of tumor cells in the aggressive tumors compared with good outcome tumors. However, staining for Yap was weak. Interestingly, there was loss of nuclear expression of C-Myc in majority of tumor cells in aggressive tumors, whereas nuclear staining was retained in most tumor cells of good responders. The N-Myc and PLK-1 immunostains did not reveal any significant differences in the 2 groups of HB. The immunostains for Notch2, Hes1, and Hes5 showed weak to moderately strong staining in tumor cells, but there was no obvious difference in the 2 groups. Our pilot study suggests that in nonsmall cell HB, diffusely increased expression of Survivin and CK19, and loss of nuclear expression of C-Myc marks the tumors as having an aggressive course.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 28187036      PMCID: PMC5957771          DOI: 10.1097/PAI.0000000000000492

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Immunohistochem Mol Morphol        ISSN: 1533-4058


  8 in total

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Journal:  Hepatology       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 17.425

2.  Hippo pathway activity influences liver cell fate.

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3.  Tumor necrosis predicts survival following neo-adjuvant chemotherapy for hepatoblastoma.

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Authors:  Piotr Czauderna; Dolores Lopez-Terrada; Eiso Hiyama; Beate Häberle; Marcio H Malogolowkin; Rebecka L Meyers
Journal:  Curr Opin Pediatr       Date:  2014-02       Impact factor: 2.856

5.  Expression profiling and differential screening between hepatoblastomas and the corresponding normal livers: identification of high expression of the PLK1 oncogene as a poor-prognostic indicator of hepatoblastomas.

Authors:  Shin-ichi Yamada; Miki Ohira; Hiroshi Horie; Kiyohiro Ando; Hajime Takayasu; Yutaka Suzuki; Sumio Sugano; Takahiro Hirata; Takeshi Goto; Tadashi Matsunaga; Eiso Hiyama; Yutaka Hayashi; Hisami Ando; Sachiyo Suita; Michio Kaneko; Fumiaki Sasaki; Kohei Hashizume; Naomi Ohnuma; Akira Nakagawara
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Authors:  Dolores López-Terrada; Preethi H Gunaratne; Adekunle M Adesina; Joseph Pulliam; David M Hoang; Yummy Nguyen; Toni-Ann Mistretta; Judith Margolin; Milton J Finegold
Journal:  Hum Pathol       Date:  2009-02-05       Impact factor: 3.466

7.  Gene expression profiling reveals signatures characterizing histologic subtypes of hepatoblastoma and global deregulation in cell growth and survival pathways.

Authors:  Adekunle M Adesina; Dolores Lopez-Terrada; Kwong K Wong; Preethi Gunaratne; Yummy Nguyen; Joseph Pulliam; Judith Margolin; Milton J Finegold
Journal:  Hum Pathol       Date:  2009-02-05       Impact factor: 3.466

8.  Hepatic stem-like phenotype and interplay of Wnt/beta-catenin and Myc signaling in aggressive childhood liver cancer.

Authors:  Stefano Cairo; Carolina Armengol; Aurélien De Reyniès; Yu Wei; Emilie Thomas; Claire-Angélique Renard; Andrei Goga; Asha Balakrishnan; Michaela Semeraro; Lionel Gresh; Marco Pontoglio; Hélène Strick-Marchand; Florence Levillayer; Yann Nouet; David Rickman; Frédéric Gauthier; Sophie Branchereau; Laurence Brugières; Véronique Laithier; Raymonde Bouvier; Françoise Boman; Giuseppe Basso; Jean-François Michiels; Paul Hofman; Francine Arbez-Gindre; Hélène Jouan; Marie-Christine Rousselet-Chapeau; Dominique Berrebi; Luc Marcellin; François Plenat; Dominique Zachar; Madeleine Joubert; Janick Selves; Dominique Pasquier; Paulette Bioulac-Sage; Michael Grotzer; Margaret Childs; Monique Fabre; Marie-Annick Buendia
Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2008-12-09       Impact factor: 31.743

  8 in total
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2.  Histological and immunohistochemical study of hepatoblastoma: correlation with tumour behaviour and survival.

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  3 in total

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