| Literature DB >> 35457244 |
Ludovica Bartiromo1, Matteo Schimberni1, Roberta Villanacci1, Giorgia Mangili1, Stefano Ferrari1, Jessica Ottolina1, Noemi Salmeri1, Carolina Dolci1, Iacopo Tandoi1, Massimo Candiani1.
Abstract
Ovarian endometriosis may increase the risk of malignancy. Several studies have suggested atypical endometriosis as the direct precursor of endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer. We performed an advanced, systematic search of the online medical databases PubMed and Medline. The search revealed n = 40 studies eligible for inclusion in this systematic review. Of these, n = 39 were finally included. The results from included studies are characterized by high heterogeneity, but some consistency has been found for altered expression in phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)/AKT/mTOR pathway, ARID1a, estrogen and progesterone receptors, transcriptional, nuclear, and growth factors in atypical endometriosis. Although many targets have been proposed as biomarkers for the presence of atypical endometriosis, none of them has such strong evidence to justify their systematic use in clinical practice, and they all need expensive molecular analyses. Further well-designed studies are needed to validate the evidence on available biomarkers and to investigate novel serum markers for atypical endometriosis.Entities:
Keywords: atypia; atypical; atypical endometriosis; biomarker; endometriosis; marker
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35457244 PMCID: PMC9029517 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23084425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Flow diagram of the search strategy, screening, eligibility, and inclusion criteria (PRISMA template).
Studies investigating molecular targets associated with atypical endometriosis.
| Authors | Date | Type of Study | Immunohistochemical Analysis | Study Period | AE (n), | EAOC (n), | Endometrios (n), | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chalas et al. [ | 1990 | Retrospective Study | Average AgNORs * | NR | 10, NR | 10, NR | 10, NR |
The mean AgNOR count per nucleus was significantly greater in cancer than in TE and AE. The mean AgNORs count per nucleus was significantly greater in AE than in TE. |
| Ogawa et al. [ | 2000 | Retrospective Study | Ki-67 | 1980–1995 | 29, NR | 30 CCC, 3 EnOC, 4 OSC, 51.4 yo (range, | 33, NR |
Ki-67 indices were as follows: ovarian carcinoma, 23.1 + 3.29; AE, 9.9 + 1.73; TE, 2.7 + 0.90. Significant differences were observed between carcinoma and AE, between AE and TE, and between carcinoma and TE. * |
| Bayramoglu et al. [ | 2001 | Retrospective Study | p53 | NR | 7, 34.1 ± NR | 10, NR | 137, 36.1 ± NR |
2/10 EAOC showed diffuse-strong and 1/10 showed focal-strong p53 tumor suppressor gene expression. No alterations in the AE group. |
| Nezhat et al. [ | 2002 | Comparative Study | bcl-2, p53 | NR | -- | 24 EnOC, 19 CCC, 40 OSC; NR | 30; NR |
bcl-2 was reported to stain 23% of benign endometriotic cysts, 67% of EnOC, 73% of CCC, and 50% of OSC. 42% of benign endometriotic lesions adjacent to the EnOC and 73% adjacent to CCC were found to stain for bcl-2. p53 staining was negative in the benign endometriotic cyst group and was positive in 37–55% of the group with tumors. p53 staining was positive in 25% of the benign endometriotic lesions next to the EnOC and in 9% of the benign endometriotic lesions next to CCC. |
| Del Carmen et al. [ | 2003 | Retrospective study | VEGF, Ki-67, ER, PR | NR | 17, NR | 8, NR | -- |
94.1% EAOC stained positively for VEGF, compared with only 12.5% of the AE. 23.5% EAOC stained positively for ER compared with 100% AE. 35% EAOC stained positively for PR compared with 100% AE. |
| Amemiya et al. [ | 2004 | Case series | K-ras mutation | 1987–1999 | -- | 12 EnOC, 56 ± 7.3 (range 43–68) | -- |
5/12 had MSI (3/5 high MSI). 1/12 K-ras codon 12 mutation. |
| Sáinz de la Cuesta et al. [ | 2004 | Retrospective study | p53, c-erbB-2, MIB1, | 1948–1999 | 6 | 17 | 17 |
14 out of 17 (82.4%) EAOC associated with endometriosis and all AE had p53 overexpression. Only 2 of 17 (11.8%) endometriosis patients had mutant p53. Increased expression of MIB1 (0.073) in the cancer and AE groups, and no differences in expression of Bcl-2 or c-erb-B-2 (never expressed). The sensitivity and specificity of p53 as a marker for AE/EAOCs were 87%; CI 95% (73.2–100%) and 92% (80.6–100%). p53 and MIB1 overexpression was lowest in the endometriosis and highest in the EAOC, with an intermediate expression in the AE. |
| Akahane et al. [ | 2005 | Case Series | ERα, ERβ, PRA, PRB | 1993–2000 | -- | 4 CCC, 56,5 ± 1.11 | -- |
No changes in ERβ and PRB; Gradual reductions of ERa in 3/4 CCCs, and of PRA in 2/4 CCCs (in particular was first noted in areas of AE); Increased c-erbB-2 expression (first observed at sites of AE); Disappearance of steroid hormone dependency might be involved in the malignant transformation of endometriosis into CCCs. Gradual increases in ERa expression from endometriosis to AE to carcinoma; Increased p53 and Ki-67 expression (first observed at AE sites). |
| Kato N et al. [ | 2006 | Retrospective Study | HNF-1beta | NR | 4, 32–79 | 30 (17 CCC), 32–79 | 40, NR |
All of the 30 CCCs showed strong nuclear immunostaining for HNF-1beta. No significant difference between the HNF-1beta score for CCC with endometriosis (17 cases) and that for CCC without endometriosis (13 cases). Among 12 CCC in which endometriotic epithelium was identified, 9 cases showed distinct nuclear staining for HNF-1beta in the endometriotic epithelium. The epithelium showing HNF-1beta expression was that of AE in 4 cases (13%), while it was that of endometriosis showing inflammatory atypia in 5 cases. Most of the epithelium of endometriotic cysts was negative for nuclear staining for HNF-1beta. |
| Ali-Fehmi et al. [ | 2006 | Retrospective Study | LOH and MSI | NR | 12, NR | 20, NR | 23, NR |
LOH was present in endometriosis (30%), AE (25%) and ovarian carcinoma (40%). A high frequency of MSI was found in endometriosis (82.6%) and AE (75%) compared to EAOC (53%). Significant differences in LOH were seen between endometriosis (4.3%) and ovarian carcinoma (23.5%) at D10S608. |
| Akahane et al. [ | 2007 | Retrospective Study | p53 | 1993–2002 | -- | 13 CCC, 55 ± NR | 7, 34 ± NR |
No p53 mutations in solitary endometriosis or endometriosis coexisting with EnOC. CCC cases, p53 mutation was observed in 4/13 endometriosis cases and in 4/13 cancer cell cases. In 1/9 of EnOC, the cancer tissue had a nonsense mutation of the p53 gene. |
| Finas et al. | 2008 | Retrospective Study | L1CAM | NR | 14, NR | -- | 17, NR |
2/14 were L1 positive. 13/17 were L1 positive. |
| Yamamoto et al. [ | 2008 | Retrospective Study | PDGFR-a, PDGFR-b, PDGF-AB | 1987–2005 | 19, NR | 31 CCC, NR | 17, NR |
Positivity for PDGFR-a/b, PDGF-A increased in accordance with higher cytologic atypia in the putative precursors: 71, 47, and 59% in the 17 TE, 84, 73, and 84% in the AE and 97, 97, and 100% in the 31 CCC. Positivity for PDGF-B decreased in accordance with increased atypia in endometriosis coexisting with CCC: 35% in TE, 11% in AE, and 5% in coexisting carcinomas. |
| Wiegand et al. [ | 2010 | Case reports of 2 patients | BAF250a | NR | 2 AE contiguous to CCC | 2 CCC | 2 distant endometriosis to CCC |
ARID1A mutations and loss of BAF250a expression evident in CCC and contiguous AE but not in distant endometriotic lesions. Both regions of endometriosis differ from the CCC in their lack of HNF-1β expression (with weak expression in the contiguous AE). |
| Yamamoto et al. [ | 2010 | Retrospective Study | p27Kip1, Skp2, | 1988–2007 | 15, NR | 23 CCC, NR | 31, NR |
The cell-cycle regulators examined were overexpressed (Skp2, Cks1, cyclin A and cyclin E) or downregulated (p27Kip1) significantly more frequently in the CCC than in the adjacent endometriosis *. The frequency of Skp2 overexpression was significantly higher in AE than in endometriosis, and the frequency of Skp2 and cyclin A overexpression was significantly higher in CCC than in AE *. The mean Ki67 labeling index increased from endometriosis (8.4%) through AE (21.4%) to CCC (46.9%) *. |
| Yamamoto et al. [ | 2011 | Retrospective Study | PIK3CA | 1986–2007 | 8, NR | 23 CCC, NR | 8, NR |
Direct sequencing identified mutations in 10 (43%) of the 23 endometriosis-associated CCC (H1047R substitution). Six (75%) of eight non-atypical endometriotic lesions and seven (88%) of eight atypical endometriotic lesions contained the H1047R mutation. |
| Kato et al. [ | 2012 | Retrospective Study | p-mTOR, HIF-1, Glut1 | 1987–2005 | 16, NR | 36 CCC, NR | 21, NR |
The frequencies of immunopositivity for p-mTOR, HIF-1 a, and Glut1iwere 58, 5 and 16% in the non-AE; 63, 37 and 50% in AE; 77, 95 and 95% in the EAOC. p-mTOR, HIF-1a and Glut1 were positive in 10, 5, and 19% of the solitary endometriosis, respectively. |
| Xiao et al. [ | 2012 | Retrospective study | BAF250a, HNF-1b, ER and PR | 1995–2010 | 13 | 26 CCC | 36 |
both AE and adjacent CCC had a similar prifile, with a loss of BAF250a expression (38.5% vs. 57.7%), HNF-1b up-regulation (53.8% vs. 92.3%), and loss of ER (84.6% vs. 92.3%) and PR (76.9% vs. 84.6%) expression. About 20% of BE had loss of BAF250a expression, 33% with HNF-1b up-regulation, 23% loss of ER expression, and 50% loss of PR expression, respectively. The concurrent rate of loss of BAF250a expression, HNF-1b up-regulation, and loss of ER expression was not observed in any BE, was increased to 23.1% in AE, and was further increased to 42.3% in CCC. |
| Yamamoto et al. [ | 2012 | Retrospective Study | ARID1A, PIK3CA | 1986–2007 | 22, NR | 28 CCC, NR | 22, NR |
ARID1A immunoreactivity was deficient in 17 (61%) of the 28 endometriosis-associated carcinomas. Among the precursor lesions adjacent to the 23 ARID1A-deficient carcinomas, 86% of the TE (12 of 14) and 100% of the AE (14 of 14), benign (3 of 3), and borderline (6 of 6) clear-cell adenofibroma components were found to be ARID1A deficient. All 22 solitary endometrioses and 10 endometrioses distant from ARID1A-deficient carcinomas showed diffuse immunoreactivity for ARID1A. Somatic mutations of PIK3CA were detected in 17 (40%) tumors, and the majority (71%) of these were ARID1A-deficient carcinomas (NS). All six of the PIK3CA-mutation-positive non- AE were immunohistochemically ARID1A deficient. All of the 6 AE harboring PIK3CA mutations were ARID1A deficient. |
| Yamamoto et al. [ | 2012 | Retrospective Study | MET | 1987–2006 | 10, NR | 5 CCC, NR | 10, NR |
All the 10 non-AE examined were found to exhibit no gain of MET by double in situ hybridization assay, and all showed weak immunoreactions for MET. Of the 10 AE, 1 (10%), 4 (40%), and 5 (50%) lesions were defined as exhibiting no gain, low-level gain, and high-level gain of MET, respectively. Of the 5 CCC wherein adjacent AE harbored a high-level gain of MET, all the corresponding carcinoma components examined also showed high-level gain of MET and overexpression of MET. |
| Yamamoto et al. [ | 2012 | Retrospective study | ACTN4 gene (encoding for Actinin-4) | 1986–2007 | 12 adjacent to tumor, of which:-9 both AE and BE | 16 adjacent to tumor, of | 19 CCC |
All 16 BE showed no gain of ACTN4 or actinin-4 overexpression; 50% of the AE and 75% of the borderline CCAFs showed low-level gains of ACTN4 and actinin-4 overexpression, respectively. |
| Lai et al. [ | 2013 | Retrospective Study | ER, HNF-1 beta, p53, PTEN, | 2001–2011 | -- | 79 ((33 EnOC; 40 CCC; 4 OSC; 1 ASC; 1 AS), NR | -- |
Positive staining for ER, HNF1ß, p53, and COX-2 were identified in 34 (43%), 30 (38%), 10 (13%), and 44 (56%) cases. Loss of PTEN and BAF250a were noted in 29 (37%) and 37 (47%) cases. All staining results were similar between AE and contiguous EAOC. The expression of ER was reversely correlated with that of HNF1ß and correlated with p53 *. |
| Vercellini et al. [ | 2013 | Retrospective study | IMP3 | 2004-2009 | 9 (35.1 ± 8.1) | NR | 508 |
8 of 9 (88%) AE showed IMP3 expression, no expression in contiguous endometrial benign cells and in benign cyst Test specificity and PPV: 100%; Sensitivity 88.9%, NPV 99.8%. |
| Lin et al. [ | 2014 | Retrospective Study | SRAP, ERs | 2003–2012 | 12, 32–62 yo | 12 CCC, 32–62 yo | 24, NR |
The positive ratio of ER- expression inthe patients with CCC gradually reduced from ovarian endometriosis (83.3%) to AE (33.3%) to CCC (0%). The poorest intense expression of SRAP was detected in the cells of endometriosis showing the most intense expression in the CCC. |
| Suryawanshi et al. [ | 2014 | Retrospective Study | Immune gene expression analysis | NR | 15 (48 ± 6.5) | 28 (54.8 yo ± 11.6) | NE: 32 (46.5 yo ± 6) BE:30 (40 yo ± 10) |
Immune gene expression analysis revealed different disease categories: controls, endometriosis and EAOC (AE shared an EAOC pattern). 33% of the patients with endometriosis revealed a tumor-like inflammation profile. Gene expression analyses revealed the complement pathway as most prominently involved in both endometriosis, AE and EAOC (C3, C4a, C7, CFD, CFB, CFH, MASP1). Complement proteins were also highly expressed in endometriosis, AE and EAOC epithelial cells at IHC. Conditional activation of tumor-driving pathways (K-ras activating mutations and PTEN deletion) leads to complement gene upregulation. C7 knockdown in a mouse model inhibited ovarian cell proliferation. |
| Anglesio et al. [ | 2015 | Whole-genome shotgun sequencing (WGSS) | Overall pattern of somatic mutations within EAOC (CCC and EnOC) | NR | - | 7 CCC | 7 |
DNA copy gains in HNF1B (5/7), PPM1D (5/7), ERBB2 (4/7), STAT3 (4/7); 3q PIK3CA (4/7), ARID1A (4/7), including one high-level gain of PIK3CA observed in case 7. No amplification of MET or amplification of ERBB2. |
| Matsumoto et al. [ | 2015 | Retrospective Study | HIF-1a, iNOS, PIK3CA, pAkt, p65, and HNF-1β, Mutations of the β-Catenin and PIK3CA Genes | 2000–2014 | -- | 28 CCC, 35 EnOC, 54.1 (range 22–28) | -- |
Mutations in exon 3 of the β-catenin gene were identified in 21 (60%) of 35 EnOCs and in the coexisting non-AE (52.4%) and AE (73.3%) but not in any of the CCC and their coexisting endometriosis. PIK3CA mutations were observed in 11 (31.4%) of 35 EnOC and 10 (35.7%) of 28 OCCC. The same mutations were detected in coexisting AE and non-AE in 3/11 EnOC and 4/11 CCC. Significant differences in the expression of pAkt, HNF- 1β,HIF-1α, p65, and iNOS were evident between the two types of tumors and their coexisting AE and non-AE. |
| Er et al. [ | 2016 | Case series | DNA extraction and sequencing | 2006–2012 | -- | 8 CCC | -- |
The most frequently mutated genes in cancer were: PIK3CA (60 %; 6/10), ARID1A (50%; 5/10), ETS1, MLH1 and PRKDC (30%; 3/10), and SYNE1 (20%; 2/10). In concomitant AE: ARID1A (33.3%; 2/6), PIK3CA (50%; 3/6). 108 mutations in case 1 and 50 mutations in case 2, including MLH1, MSH2, and MSH6 genes involved in the DNA mismatch repair (MMR) system. |
| Kato et al. [ | 2016 | Retrospective Study | BAF250a | 1984–2007 | 38, NR | 38 CCC, NR | 18, NR |
Concurrence of endometriosis observed more frequently in BAF250a-deficient cases compared with in BAF250a-retained cases *. BAF250a-deficient expression were 26% (10/38) in AE. In solitary endometriosis, loss of BAF250a expression was detected in 6% (1/18) of the cases. A significant difference of BAF250a-deficient expression was observed between EM-related CCCs and CCAF-related CCCs *. |
| Ma et al. [ | 2016 | Retrospective Study | PTEN and p53 | 10, NR | 23, NR | 20, NR |
PTEN and p53 mutation frequency in EAOC were significantly higher than that in AE and endometriosis. There was a significant difference to compare EAOC with endometriosis, and converse to compare with AE, respectively *. In 2 cases of histological malignant progression, both p53 and PTEN mutations were present. A decreasing trend of PTEN mutation and an increasing trend of p53 mutation were represented with the increased age, decreased clinical stage, pathological grade, and metastasis. | |
| Stamp et al. [ | 2016 | Retrospective study | BAF250a | 2005–2008 | 23 associated with cancer | 21 EnOC, 50 yo (30-70) |
Concordant Loss of BAF250a Expression in 14 EaOC and in 10 contiguous AE: 6 of the 10 cases (60%) showed BAF250a loss in the contiguous AE, and 3 of these 6 cases also demonstrated loss in adjacent TE as well In benign ovarian endometrioma, all cases of AE showed retention of BAF250a also in TE. | |
| Andersen et al. [ | 2018 | Retrospective Study | E2sig, ERα, ERβ, PR | NR | 11, 47 (range 34–20) | 19, 57.5 (range 47–77) | 11, 39 (range 25–74) |
Decreasing ERα and PR protein from benign endometriosis to EAOC. ERβ and FGF18 mRNA expression increases incrementally from benign endometriosis to EAOC. Some ERα induced genes decrease during the progression of endometriosis to EAOC while several ERα-induced genes remain highly expressed. |
| Zhang et al. [ | 2018 | Retrospective Study | genome-wide transcriptomic profiling | NR | 4, NR | 5 EnOC, NR | 4, NR |
Distinct clustering between EnOC with and without concurrent endometriosis and AE. NFkB, RAS, and TGF-b signaling are involved in EnOC associated with endometriosis and AE. |
| Niguez-Sevilla et al. [ | 2019 | Prospective Study | Ki-67, BAF250a, COX-2 | 2014–2017 | 23 | 26 | 159 |
The Ki-67 higher in AE than in BE. Higher COX-2 expression in BE than in AE. Higher loss of BAF250a expression in AE than BE. |
| Jiao et al. [ | 2019 | Case Report | CK7, CEA, p16, CA 125, MUC-6, p53, PTEN, ER, PR, CK20, PAX-8, CDX-2 | NR | 46 yo | 1 OMC | NR |
Tumor cells positive for CK 7, CEA, p16, CA125, MUC-6, and p53. They were negative for PTEN, ER, PR, CK19, CK20, PAX-8, and CDX2. The atypical endometriotic epithelium was positive for PAX-8. |
| Păvăleanu et al. [ | 2020 | Retrospective Study | E-cadherin,β-catenin, CK18, Bcl-2/Bax, ER, PR | 2005-2017 | -- | 19 (8 EnOC; 11 non EnOC), 59.10 yo | 31, 36.61 yo |
Higher immunoexpression of CK18 and E-cadherin in endometriosis than in neoplastic counterparts. β-catenin had stronger immunoexpression in tumors compared with endometriotic areas *. Bcl-2/Bax higher rate in endometriosis had a statistically significant association with more aggressive tumor behavior *. PR immunostaining correlated with ovarian location of endometriosis and tumor grade of EAOC *. Stromal ER and PR immunoexpression were significantly lower in endometriosis in comparison to tumor stroma, and PR stromal immunoexpression had been higher in more differentiated tumors compared to less differentiated types *. |
| Penciu et al. [ | 2020 | Case Series | ER, PR, Ki67, p53, p16, WT1, CD 34, CD10 | 2015–2017 | -- | 2 EnOC, 2 OSC; 30–60 yo | -- |
No similarities between endometriosis and ovarian cancer and no AE was identified. Higher values of ER expression in endometriosis were associated with OSC than in those associated with EnOC. Higher values of ER expression were also recorded in ovarian cancer than in endometriotic foci. An aberrant expression of p53 and p16 was noted only in OSC. Positive WT1 was identified only in OSC. |
| Lenz et al. [ | 2021 | Retrospective Study | ER, PR, Ki67, p53 | NR | 5, NR | -- | 40, 33.1 yo (22.0–47.0) |
In AE, higher and strong p53 expression (on average 26%) and decrease in ER (on average 56%) and PR (less than 1%) expression was observed *. |
| Shin et al. [ | 2021 | Case control study | TSPAN1 | NR | 18 (40 ± 6.6) | 7 AdjEm (44.5 ± 11) | 9 (27.7 ± 5.4) |
Consistent increase in expression of all 14 genes from endometriosis to AE and AdjEm and finally to OCCC. TSPAN1 expression is higher in early stage OCCC and AE. TSPAN1 increases cell growth via AMPK phosphorylation in endometriosis cell lines (response to hypoxia). TSPAN1 knockdown reduces OCCC cell growth via a mechanism not involving AMPK. |
* p-values statistically significant (p < 0.05). Legend. NR, Not reported; AE, atypical endometriosis; TE, Typical endometriosis; EAOC, endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer; yo, years old; MSI, Microsatellite Instability; ER, Estrogens Receptor; PR, Progesterone receptor; EGFR, Epithelial Growth Factor Receptor; HNF-1beta, hepatocyte nuclear factor-1beta; LOH, Loss of Heterozygosity; PTEN, Phosphatase and tensin homolog; EnOC, ovarian endometrioid carcinoma; CCC, ovarian clear cell carcinoma; CCAF, benign clear-cell adenofibroma; OSC, ovarian serous carcinoma; OMC, ovarian mucinous carcinoma; E2sig, a panel of 236 genes associated with endocrine response, 158 of which showed statistically significant changes in expression between different disease states; FGF18, Fibroblast Growth Factor 18; L1-ICAM, L1, cell adhesion molecule; PDGFR, platelet-derived growth factor receptor; PDGF, platelet-derived growth factor; Cks, cyclin-dependent kinase subunit 1; p-mTOR, phosphorylated mammalian target of rapamycin; ARID1A, AT-rich interactive domain 1;AHIF-1, hypoxia-inducible factor-1; Glut1, glucose transporter 1; COX-2, cyclooxygenase-2; SRAP, steroid receptor RNA activator protein; ASC, adenosquamous carcinoma; AS, adenosarcoma; iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase; CEA, Carcinomatous embryonic antigen; CK, Cytokeratin; CA 125, Carbohydrate Antigen 125; MUC-6, Mucine 6; PAX-8, Paired-box gene 8; CDX2, Caudal Type Homeobox 2; Bcl-2, B-cell lymphoma 2; Bcl-2-associated X, BAX; CD, cluster of differentiation; WT1, Wilm’s tumor 1; TSPAN1, Tetraspanin1; AdjEm, adjacent endometriosis to OCCC; NE, normal endometrium; BE, benign endometriosis; C3, C4a, C7, CFD, CFB, CFH, Complement factors 3, 4a, 7, D, B, H;, MASP1, mannose-associated serine protease 1; IHC, immunohistochemistry; BAF250a, Brahma-associated factor (BRG-)associated factor 250a; HNF-1β, hepatocyte nuclear factor 1β; IMP3, insulin-like growth factor II mRNA-binding protein 3; PPV, Positive predictive value; NPV, Negative predictive value; PIK3CA, phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase catalytic subunit alpha. * Nucleolar organizer regions (NORs) are loops of DNA, which are associated with nonhistone nucleoproteins, and they can be stained with silver (AgNORs). An increased number of AgNORs per nucleus is observed in many malignancies.