Literature DB >> 9484947

Well-differentiated thyroid carcinomas: p53 mutation status and microvessel density.

J D Goldenberg1, L G Portugal, B L Wenig, K Ferrer, J C Wu, J Sabnani.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Risk-stratification schemes exist for well-differentiated thyroid carcinoma and include prognostic factors such as age, sex, extent of tumor, size of tumor, and presence of metastasis. Controversy continues, however, over the aggressiveness of initial surgical intervention because of anecdotal experiences of poor clinical outcomes in low-risk patients. Our objective is to determine the prognostic significance of two biologic tumor markers, the p53 gene mutation and CD34 microvessel density (MVD) count, in well-differentiated tumors of thyroid gland.
METHODS: We selected 38 patients with well-differentiated thyroid carcinomas from the University of Illinois Tumor Registry. Patients had an average clinical follow-up of 10 years. Paraffin-embedded tumor specimens were available for all patients. Immunohistochemistry was performed to identify mutations of the p53 gene (Ab 1801) and to determine the MVD count (CD34).
RESULTS: There were significant increases in MVD counts within thyroid tumor tissue, when compared with surrounding, normal thyroid tissue. There was no significant correlation noted, however, between increased MVD and histology or recurrence rates. There was a trend toward higher MVD counts in tumor specimens of patients initially seen with metastatic lymphadenopathy. The incidence of p53 mutation expression was 28%, and there was no correlation between p53 status and histology, sex, recurrence rate, or survival.
CONCLUSIONS: This study supports the concept of tumor neovascularization but fails to correlate MVD with clinical behavior or pathologic features in well-differentiated thyroid carcinoma. Furthermore, we found that the p53 mutation status was not an independent prognosticator of tumor behavior in these lesions.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9484947     DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1097-0347(199803)20:2<152::aid-hed9>3.0.co;2-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Head Neck        ISSN: 1043-3074            Impact factor:   3.147


  6 in total

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2.  Intratumoural lymph vessel density is related to presence of lymph node metastases and separates encapsulated from infiltrative papillary thyroid carcinoma.

Authors:  C Eloy; J Santos; P Soares; M Sobrinho-Simões
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3.  The vascular landscape of human cancer.

Authors:  Benjamin M Kahn; Alfredo Lucas; Rohan G Alur; Maximillian D Wengyn; Gregory W Schwartz; Jinyang Li; Kathryn Sun; H Carlo Maurer; Kenneth P Olive; Robert B Faryabi; Ben Z Stanger
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Review 4.  The pituitary tumor transforming gene in thyroid cancer.

Authors:  G D Lewy; N Sharma; R I Seed; V E Smith; K Boelaert; C J McCabe
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  2012-04-05       Impact factor: 4.256

5.  VEGF expression, microvessel density and dendritic cell decrease in thyroid cancer.

Authors:  Maya Gulubova; Koni Ivanova; Julian Ananiev; Julieta Gerenova; Aleksandar Zdraveski; Hristo Stoyanov; Tatyana Vlaykova
Journal:  Biotechnol Biotechnol Equip       Date:  2014-09-25       Impact factor: 1.632

6.  Microvessel density in differentiated thyroid carcinoma: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Konstantinos Perivoliotis; Athina A Samara; Prodromos Koutoukoglou; Panagiotis Ntellas; Katerina Dadouli; Sotirios Sotiriou; Maria Ioannou; Konstantinos Tepetes
Journal:  World J Methodol       Date:  2022-09-20
  6 in total

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