Literature DB >> 32236967

Performance of the pattern-based interpretation of p53 immunohistochemistry as a surrogate for TP53 mutations in vulvar squamous cell carcinoma.

Kim E Kortekaas1, Nienke Solleveld-Westerink2, Basile Tessier-Cloutier3, Tessa A Rutten2, Mariëtte I E Poelgeest1, C Blake Gilks3, Lien N Hoang3, Tjalling Bosse2.   

Abstract

AIMS: The most commonly mutated gene in vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (VSCC) is TP53 and its prognostic value, particularly in HPV-independent VSCC, is uncertain. In other tumours, p53 immunohistochemistry (IHC) is an excellent surrogate marker for TP53 mutations. In order to study this in VSCC, we assigned six p53 IHC patterns into two final classes: 'wild-type' or 'mutant'. We determined the performance and interobserver variability of this pattern-based p53 IHC approach. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Two experienced gynaecological pathologists scored the predefined p53 IHC patterns of 59 VSCC, independently and blinded for molecular data. Agreement was calculated by Cohen's kappa. All disagreements regarding p53 IHC patterns were resolved by a consensus meeting. After DNA isolation, the presence of pathogenic TP53 variants was determined by next-generation sequencing (NGS). Sensitivity, specificity and accuracy of p53 IHC as a surrogate marker for TP53 mutation status were calculated. Initial p53 IHC pattern interpretation showed substantial agreement between both observers (k = 0.71, P < 0.001). After consensus, 18 cases (30.5%) were assigned a final p53 IHC class as TP53 wild-type and 41 cases (69.5%) as mutant. The accuracy between the p53 IHC class and TP53 mutation status, after the consensus meeting, was 96.6%. Moreover, the sensitivity and specificity were high 95.3% [95% confidence interval (CI) = 82.9-99.1% and 100% (95% CI = 75.9-100%)].
CONCLUSIONS: Pattern-based p53 IHC classification is highly reproducible among experienced gynaecological pathologists and accurately reflects TP53 mutations in VSCC. This approach to p53 IHC interpretation offers guidance and provides necessary clarity for resolving the proposed prognostic relevance of final p53 IHC class within HPV-independent VSCC.
© 2020 The Authors. Histopathology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  TP53 mutations; p53 immunohistochemistry; squamous cell carcinoma; surrogate marker; vulvar cancer

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32236967      PMCID: PMC7383647          DOI: 10.1111/his.14109

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Histopathology        ISSN: 0309-0167            Impact factor:   5.087


Introduction

Molecular testing is rapidly being introduced into the classification systems of many malignancies throughout pathology, including gynaecological pathology. These integrated molecular classification systems result in biologically homogeneous ‘histo‐molecular’ entities that are well‐suited for future trial designs in which novel (targeted) treatments can be tested. To facilitate the rapid implementation of these novel approaches in diagnostic pathology, reliable surrogate markers are required. For vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (VSCC) it has long been recognised that at least two ‘histo‐molecular’ subclasses can be recognized: HPV (human papillomavirus)‐associated VSCC and VSCC independent of HPV. , In order to separate these two VSCC subtypes, p16 immunohistochemistry (IHC) has been shown to be a reliable surrogate marker (sensitivity = 100%, specificity = 98.4%) for integrated high‐risk HPV in cases exhibiting strong and diffuse ‘block‐type’ p16 expression. HPV‐independent VSCC comprise the majority of all VSCC in most developed countries. This group of patients has worse overall‐ and recurrence‐free survival, despite current treatments. , Therefore, special focus on the improvement of standard treatment in this particular group is warranted. Studies spanning the last two decades have reported that HPV‐independent VSCC are often driven by TP53 mutations. Recent data, however, convincingly showed that a subset of HPV‐independent VSCC without TP53 mutations were associated with an intermediate risk of recurrence. The existence of this third ‘histo‐molecular’ subclass is further supported by recent reports of HPV‐independent VSCC precursor lesions. Whether this VSCC subclass should be regarded as a distinct clinicopathological entity is currently still under debate. In the meantime, it is necessary to develop a uniform approach towards the interpretation of p53 IHC patterns in vulvar cancer. Similar approaches in both endometrial and ovarian cancer have been succesful. , , A recent study categorised HPV‐independent VSCC based on p53 IHC as wild‐type or abnormal expression. The latter was associated with TP53 mutations and consisted of diffuse strong nuclear overexpression or nuclear overexpression restricted to the basal layers of the tumour or complete absence of nuclear staining of tumour cells in the presence of a positive intrinsic control. In addition to these patterns, cytoplasmic p53 overexpression has been described as a fourth pattern which is associated with TP53 mutations. Scattered and weak nuclear expressions were previously assigned as p53 IHC wild‐type. Finally, a pattern of nuclear p53 overexpression in which the basal keratinocytes were spared (exhibited no expression) has been described in HPV‐associated lesions. Although these six p53 IHC patterns have been recognised, their performance as surrogate marker for TP53 mutational status has not been formally tested. Also, the interobserver agreement of this p53 IHC pattern‐based approach in VSCC is unknown. Therefore, we aimed to validate the performance of a pattern‐based p53 IHC interpretation in a large cohort of VSCC and assessed its reproducibility.

Materials and methods

CASE SELECTION

To constitute our cohort, we combined a retrospective case series of Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC, n = 48) and Vancouver General Hospital (n = 32) of patients who were surgically treated for primary invasive VSCC. For both centres, the cases were derived from larger cohorts which were previously tested for HPV presence by p16 IHC and HPV–polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and stained for p53 IHC. , In order to create a cohort in which all p53 IHC patterns were represented, one researcher [not involved in the p53 IHC scoring (KEK) enriched the cohort for HPV‐independent VSCCs including ‘uncommon’ p53 staining patterns. All FFPE blocks were cut into 4‐μm slides and stained with haematoxylin and eosin (H&E) and checked for the presence of VSCC by the local gynaecological pathologist. This study was granted ethical approval B16.024. Secondary use of tissue specimens adhered to the Dutch guidelines for proper use of human tissue.

P53 IHC

For each case, p53 IHC was carried out locally with a protocol used for clinical purposes. Slides were stained with Dako Omnis and Dako EnVisionTM FLEX + detection system (p53 antibody, clone DO‐7, mouse monoclonal; Dako, Amstelveen, the Netherlands), although in a different solution (Vancouver 1:500 dilution, LUMC ready‐to‐use).

PATTERN‐BASED P53 IHC SCORING

Based on the literature and experience from large retrospective cohorts, two p53 immunohistochemical staining patterns were considered to represent ‘final p53 IHC class wild‐type’ patterns; (1) scattered: heterogeneous nuclear staining of variable intensities in the basal and parabasal squamous tumour cells; and (2) mid‐epithelial: strong–moderate mid‐epithelial nuclear p53 expression of tumour cells, with notable basal sparing (this pattern is associated with the presence of HPV). The remaining four patterns were considered to represent ‘final p53 IHC class mutant’ patterns: (3) basal: strong nuclear expression of consecutive basal tumour cells (minor component of nuclear expression of parabasal tumour cells is acceptable); (4) basal to parabasal/diffuse: diffuse strong nuclear staining in basal and upper layers; (5) absent expression: complete absence of nuclear expression in the presence of an intrinsic positive control (stromal cells or adjacent normal epithelium); and (6) cytoplasmic: diffuse cytoplasmic staining with or without nuclear staining in the presence of a positive intrinsic control (Figure 1). All cases were scored for p53 IHC pattern and p53 IHC final class by two pathologists (T.B. and L.H.) independently.
Figure 1

Six different p53 immunohistochemistry patterns in vulvar squamous cell carcinoma. A, Scattered p53 expression; B, mid‐epithelial p53 expression with notable sparing of the basal layer; C, basal expression; D, basal to parabasal/diffuse expression; E, absent p53 expression in the presence of an intrinsic positive control (either tumour cells or stromal cells); F, cytoplasmic expression. Scattered and mid‐epithelial (A,B) expression were designated under final p53 immunohistochemistry (IHC)‐class wild‐type, while the remaining four patterns (C–F) were designated under final p53 IHC‐class mutant. Scale bar 20 µm.

Six different p53 immunohistochemistry patterns in vulvar squamous cell carcinoma. A, Scattered p53 expression; B, mid‐epithelial p53 expression with notable sparing of the basal layer; C, basal expression; D, basal to parabasal/diffuse expression; E, absent p53 expression in the presence of an intrinsic positive control (either tumour cells or stromal cells); F, cytoplasmic expression. Scattered and mid‐epithelial (A,B) expression were designated under final p53 immunohistochemistry (IHC)‐class wild‐type, while the remaining four patterns (C–F) were designated under final p53 IHC‐class mutant. Scale bar 20 µm. Finally, cases with discordant interpretation of p53 IHC pattern were discussed between both observers in a consensus meeting, where both observers remained blinded to the NGS results (Supporting information, Figure 1).

MUTATIONAL ANALYSIS

DNA was isolated locally from each case using different techniques. At the pathology department of LUMC, an area with> 70% tumour cells was annotated for microdissection. The total nucleic acids (DNA/RNA) were isolated from formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded (FFPE) tissue slides using a fully automated tissue preparation system (TPS) robot from Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics (Tarrytown, NY, USA). DNA was quantified with the Qubit fluorometric quantification system (Life Technologies, Gent, Belgium). Next‐generation sequencing (NGS) was performed with a customised Cancer Hotspot Panel (Life Technologies), covering the full exonic region of the TP53 gene (exons 1–11), with a minimum read depth of 300. Sequencing analysis was performed on an Ion Torrent platform. At the pathology department of Vancouver, DNA isolation was performed using a QiaAmp FFPE Tissue Kit (Qiagen, Toronto, ON, Canada). Samples were included when the base quality score was> 30. Moreover, the NGS panel covered exons 4–9 of the TP53 gene, with a minimum read depth of 500. Sequencing analysis was performed on an Illumina Miseq platform. NGS data analysis was manually executed by a blinded clinical molecular biologist (N.S.). TP53 variants were assigned according to the five‐category classification: pathogenic, probably pathogenic, variant of unknown significance (VUS), probably benign and benign with a variant allele frequency (VAF) of at least 0.05. Only pathogenic and/or probably pathogenic TP53 mutations were scored as TP53 mutant.

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS

For the data analysis and illustration of the graphs and figures, the statistical software package spss version 23.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA) was used. The diagnostic test performance of p53 IHC patterns was quantified by Cohen's kappa for agreement, together with calculating the sensitivity and specificity accuracy of p53 IHC compared to TP53 mutation status.

Results

CASE–SERIES

We started with a selection of 80 VSCC from our archives, five of which were HPV‐related and 75 HPV‐independent. p53 IHC was performed on all cases, three of which were excluded for further analysis due to the lack of intrinsic control (n = 2) or not adhering to the glass slide (n = 1). After NGS, 18 VSCCs were excluded due to insufficient quality and/or quantity of the DNA (VAF < 0.05 in the background with deamination artefacts). Finally, this resulted in a study cohort of 59 VSCCs (three HPV‐associated and 56 HPV‐independent) with interpretable results.

REPRODUCIBILITY OF PATTERN‐BASED P53 IHC SCORING IN VSCC

The observers agreed in 79.7% (47 of 59) of the cases on p53 IHC patterns (Table 1), which was substantial (k = 0.71, P < 0.001). Twelve cases with disagreement on p53 IHC patterns were discussed in a consensus meeting (Supporting information, Table S1). Agreement was easily reached in one case due to a data entry error by one pathologist (case 10 in Supporting information, Table S1). In four of the remaining 11 cases, the observer's original interpretation differed between parabasal/diffuse (pattern 4) and basal p53 (pattern 3). Three of the 11 cases differed between scattered (pattern 1) and basal staining (pattern 3). In one of the 11 cases the original pattern score differed between mid‐epithelial (pattern 2) and parabasal/diffuse staining (pattern 4). Another case was scored scattered (pattern 1), but absent (pattern 5) by the other observer. Finally, two cases were scored cytoplasmic (pattern 6) by one observer, but parabasal and scattered by the other observer (Supporting information, Table S1). Agreement on p53 IHC patterns and thus final p53 IHC class interpretation was reached for all 12 discordant cases during the consensus meeting.
Table 1

p53 immunohistochemistry (IHC) patterns of 59 vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (VSCC) by two independent and blinded observers

p53‐IHC patterns observer 1
ScatteredMid‐epithelial with notable basal sapringBasalBasal and parabasal/diffuseAbsentCytoplasmicTotal
p53 IHC patterns observer 2Scattered130000013
Mid‐epithelial with notable basal sparing0201003
Basal3013007
Basal and parabasal/diffuse011230025
Absent1000506
Cytoplasmic1001035
Total1832285359
p53 immunohistochemistry (IHC) patterns of 59 vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (VSCC) by two independent and blinded observers

CONCORDANCE OF CONSENSUS P53 IHC PATTERNS WITH TP53 MUTATIONAL STATUS

Of the 59 VSCCs, 43 VSCCs harboured TP53 mutations and 16 were TP53 wild‐type (Supporting information, Table S1). The concordance between the original final p53 IHC class and TP53 mutation status was high for both observers independently (k = 0.76 and 0.91, P < 0.001, Table 2). This concordance increased to 0.92 [95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.81–1.00] when using the final p53 IHC class after the consensus meeting. The sensitivity and specificity of this approach were both high (95.3%, 95% CI = 82.9–99.1% and 100%, 95% CI = 75.9–100%, respectively). All final p53 IHC class mutant VSCC after consensus were TP53 mutant. Two of the 59 VSCC that were assigned final p53 IHC class wild‐type were TP53 mutant (Table 3).
Table 2

The p53 immunohistochemistry (IHC) patterns observed in vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (VSCC) in relation to the TP53 mutation status before consensus

Before consensus
Final p53 IHC class observer 1Final p53 IHC class observer 2

Wild‐type

p53 IHC

Mutant

p53 IHC

Wild‐type

p53 IHC

Mutant

p53 IHC

TP53 wild‐type151151
TP53 mutant538142
Total20391643
Table 3

The p53 immunohistochemistry (IHC) patterns observed in vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (VSCC) in relation to TP53 mutation status after consensus

After consensus
p53 IHC class wild‐typep53 IHC class mutantTotal
TP53 wild‐type16016
TP53 mutant24143
Total184159
Sensitivity: 95.3% [95% confidence interval (CI) = 82.9–99.1%]
Specificity: 100% (95% CI = 75.9–100%)
Accuracy: 96.6%
The p53 immunohistochemistry (IHC) patterns observed in vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (VSCC) in relation to the TP53 mutation status before consensus Wild‐type p53 IHC Mutant p53 IHC Wild‐type p53 IHC Mutant p53 IHC The p53 immunohistochemistry (IHC) patterns observed in vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (VSCC) in relation to TP53 mutation status after consensus

TWO DISCORDANT CASES BETWEEN FINAL P53 IHC CLASS AND TP53 MUTATIONAL STATUS

The remaining two VSCC with a discordance between final p53 IHC class and TP53 mutational status are shown in Figure 2. The first discordant case was a poorly differentiated HPV‐independent VSCC, and was originally scored as mid‐epithelial by one observer and parabasal by the other observer. After consensus, the observers agreed that despite suboptimal fixation and an attenuated basal layer, the staining represented a mid‐epithelial with notable sparing pattern (Figure 2). NGS of this case revealed a probably pathogenic TP53 NM_000546.5: c.451C> T missense mutation (NP_000537.3:p.Arg282Trp) with a VAF of 0.4. To explore this in more detail we stained a slide from an alternative FFPE block of the same tumour for p53, in which a clear diffuse p53 overexpression (pattern 4) was observed (Figure 2). The second case was a well‐differentiated HPV‐independent VSCC and was not discussed at the consensus meeting, as both observers had interpreted the p53 IHC pattern as scattered (pattern 1). A p53 IHC of an alternative block also showed scattered p53 IHC. With NGS, we found a pathogenic TP53 NM_000546.5: c.844C> T missense mutation (NP_000537.3:p.Pro151Ser) with a VAF of 0.09.
Figure 2

p53 immunohistochemistry of the two remaining discordant cases after consensus. NA, not applicable. For the first case (upper panel), consensus was reached on a mid‐epithelial p53 immunohistochemistry (IHC) expression pattern with basal sparing (indicated by arrow), while the tumour showed a pathogenic TP53 mutation with a high variant allele frequency (VAF). An additional p16–IHC could prevent misinterpretation of the final p53 IHC class due to the absence of ‘block‐type’ p16 expression. Because of suboptimal staining, an alternative block of the same case was stained for p53 and a diffuse expression of p53 was observed. Moreover, after revising all haematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining of this tumour revealed the presence of differentiated type, vulvar intra‐epithelial neoplasia (dVIN) as a precursor lesion, which increases the probability of harbouring TP53 mutations. The second case (lower panel) was also human papillomavirus (HPV)‐unrelated, and scored scattered by both observers. We cannot explain the discordancy between the final p53 IHC class and mutational analysis of this case, although the VAF was low but reliable. Scale bar 20 µm.

p53 immunohistochemistry of the two remaining discordant cases after consensus. NA, not applicable. For the first case (upper panel), consensus was reached on a mid‐epithelial p53 immunohistochemistry (IHC) expression pattern with basal sparing (indicated by arrow), while the tumour showed a pathogenic TP53 mutation with a high variant allele frequency (VAF). An additional p16–IHC could prevent misinterpretation of the final p53 IHC class due to the absence of ‘block‐type’ p16 expression. Because of suboptimal staining, an alternative block of the same case was stained for p53 and a diffuse expression of p53 was observed. Moreover, after revising all haematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining of this tumour revealed the presence of differentiated type, vulvar intra‐epithelial neoplasia (dVIN) as a precursor lesion, which increases the probability of harbouring TP53 mutations. The second case (lower panel) was also human papillomavirus (HPV)‐unrelated, and scored scattered by both observers. We cannot explain the discordancy between the final p53 IHC class and mutational analysis of this case, although the VAF was low but reliable. Scale bar 20 µm.

Discussion

With this study, we have confirmed the use of p53 IHC patterns as an accurate predictor for the presence of TP53 mutations in invasive VSCC as described by Tessier‐Cloutier et al. Moreover, we report a high interobserver reproducibility using this p53 IHC pattern based approach. The original p53 IHC pattern designation by the two observers resulted in an agreement of 80%, and when translated into a final p53 IHC class the accuracy was 97%.

CASES WITH INITIAL DISAGREEMENT ON P53 IHC PATTERNS

Some of the p53 IHC pattern disagreements were attributable to a minor difference in the interpretation of pattern definitions. This was particularly true for the disagreement between ‘basal’ and ‘basal to parabasal/diffuse’ patterns (patterns 3 and 4), as the overexpression of p53 in the basal tumour cells often coincides with some level of parabasal overexpression. The lack of a defined threshold (how much parabasal expression is accepted for pattern 3) explains four cases for which there was original disagreement. During the consensus meeting, the observers therefore introduced an arbitrary rule;> 10% of the tumour should show parabasal overexpression to be assigned parabasal/diffuse (pattern 4). Hereafter, consensus was easily reached for all four cases, and the percentage of agreement on p53 IHC patterns increased to 88%. There were three cases where there was an initial disagreement between the basal‐overexpression pattern and scattered pattern, an area of difficulty already identified in the prior study by Tessier‐Cloutier et al. While all three cases were resolved on consensus review, in practice we acknowledge that a subset of these cases would need TP53 mutation testing to differentiate the two. For this scenario (discriminating scattered basal versus basal overexpression) another arbitrary cut‐off to count consecutive p53 overexpressing cells may be considered. For p53 signatures in the fallopian tube, 12 consecutive p53 overexpressing cells have been proposed as a pragmatic approach to define TP53 mutational status. Whether this threshold is applicable in the context of vulvar SCC with basal p53–IHC expression remains to be determined. Despite a disagreement in p53 IHC pattern (pattern 3 versus pattern 4), the final p53 IHC class was not affected by this. In fact, independently of the minor differences in patterns scored, there was 90% agreement on final p53 IHC class prior to the consensus meeting. After the consensus, the accuracy to predict TP53 mutations based on p53 IHC wild‐type/mutant staining was high (96.6%). This is comparable to ovarian and endometrial carcinomas, where p53 IHC serves as a robust surrogate marker for TP53 mutations. , The mid‐epithelial pattern of p53 IHC expression (pattern 2) is one of the more unusual patterns and has only recently been described. It has been suggested that this pattern can be seen in HPV‐associated VSCC, as it represents senescence of tumour cells infected with persistent high‐risk HPV. In our previous study, this pattern was only observed in HPV‐associated VSCC and precancers.

DISCORDANT CASES BETWEEN P53 IHC AND TP53 MUTATION STATUS

We observed that recognising mid‐epithelial patterns can be challenging, and may be confused with either scattered wild‐type (pattern 1) or diffuse p53 overexpression (pattern 4). This is exemplified by case 1 in Figure 2, which was called mid‐epithelial upon consensus, but a second p53 IHC of an alternative block showed convincing diffuse overexpression. The addition of p16 IHC in cases in which the mid‐epithelial p53 IHC pattern is not so obvious might be useful, as pattern 2 is strongly associated with HPV‐related VSCC. In case 1, p16 IHC did not show ‘block‐type’ expression and HPV–PCR was negative. This would have helped in correct interpretation of the p53 IHC pattern and thus the final p53 IHC class. Thereby, this example supports the interpretation of p53 staining in VSCC in conjunction with p16 IHC. The second discordant case showed a scattered p53 IHC pattern (agreed upon by both observers for which no consensus was needed), but bared a pathogenic TP53 mutation (Figure 2). The tumour tissue appeared well fixed, and a review of all H&E slides of this case did not show obvious precancerous lesions such as dVIN or HSIL in the adjacent surface epithelium. The margins, however, showed epithelial changes that are in line with the spectrum of changes described as ‘verrucous acanthosis with altered differentiation (VAAD)’. In conformity, this precursor lesion also showed a weak and scattered p53 IHC pattern. Revision of the raw NGS data confirmed low background noise, which strengthens the finding that this particular mutation is a true mutation and not a deamination artefact, despite the low VAF. A possible explanation for this discordance could be an early emerging TP53 mutant clone which was picked up by the NGS, but was not detected by the p53 IHC. As this patient was diagnosed with VSCC in 2012 and did not develop recurrences, we were unable to confirm this hypothesis. This study has some limitations, one being the composition and size of our study cohort. The cohort was relatively small and enriched for unusual p53 IHC patterns, and therefore the distribution of the observed p53 IHC patterns remains unknown. We therefore encourage subsequent studies to use larger and unselected VSCC cohorts in order to study these p53 IHC patterns and validate our findings. The use of tissue microarray approaches are discouraged for this, as some of these p53 IHC patterns require a good overview of the tumour. In conclusion, this paper is the first, to our knowledge, to test the performance of the newly proposed p53 IHC pattern based interpretation in VSCC. We show that p53 IHC pattern interpretation is highly reproducible, and can serve as a reliable surrogate approach for assigning final p53 IHC class. We would like to emphasise that the high agreement was achieved in the context of optimal laboratory protocols with adequate controls (recommended external on slide control tissue; tonsil ) and review by specialised pathologists. Experience, training and proper p53 IHC staining protocols are required in order to translate our findings into routine diagnostic pathology. Nonetheless, this study represents a solid basis for further characterising the clinical relevance of stratifying (HPV‐independent) VSCC based on final p53 IHC class.

Conflict of interest

None.

Author contributions

Conception and design: KEK, LNH, TB. Acquisition of data: KEK, NSW, TAR, LNH, TB Analysis and Interpretation of data: KEK, NSW, LNH, TB. Writing and review of the manuscript: KEK, NSW, BTC, MIEvP, CBG, LNH, TB. Study supervision: TB. Figure S1 . Study design Click here for additional data file. Table S1. Information on p53 immunohistochemistry patterns and TP53 mutations of all cases in the study cohort. Click here for additional data file.
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Authors:  Ikumi Kuno; Daisuke Takayanagi; Yuka Asami; Naoya Murakami; Maiko Matsuda; Yoko Shimada; Sou Hirose; Mayumi Kobayashi Kato; Masaaki Komatsu; Ryuji Hamamoto; Kae Okuma; Takashi Kohno; Jun Itami; Hiroshi Yoshida; Kouya Shiraishi; Tomoyasu Kato
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-09-28       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Histological interpretation of differentiated vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia (dVIN) remains challenging-observations from a bi-national ring-study.

Authors:  Elf de Jonge; Mieke R Van Bockstal; Luthy S M Wong-Alcala; Suzanne Wilhelmus; Lex A C F Makkus; Katrien Schelfout; Koen K Van de Vijver; Sander Smits; Etienne Marbaix; Shatavisha Dasgupta; Senada Koljenović; Folkert J van Kemenade; Patricia C Ewing-Graham
Journal:  Virchows Arch       Date:  2021-03-08       Impact factor: 4.064

  6 in total

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