101. Assessing the Interleukin 35 Immunoexpression in Malignant Canine Mammary Tumors: Association With Clinicopathological Parameters and Prognosis.
- Author
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Carvalho MI, Pires I, Prada J, Pinto C, Gregório H, Cogliati B, and Queiroga FL
- Subjects
- Animals, Dogs, Female, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Prognosis, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Dog Diseases metabolism, Interleukins metabolism, Mammary Neoplasms, Animal metabolism
- Abstract
Background/aim: IL-35 has a prominent immunosuppressive role and its overexpression has been reported in human breast cancer. However, the impact of IL-35 in canine mammary carcinogenesis has not been addressed yet. The present study determined the clinicopathological significance of IL-35 immunoexpression and its correlation with overall survival (OS) in 72 malignant canine mammary tumor (CMT) patients., Materials and Methods: Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded malignant CMT samples (n=72) were submitted to immunohistochemical staining to detect IL-35 expression. Survival curves were obtained by the Kaplan-Meier method and the log-rank test was used for the survival estimates. Cox proportional hazard model for multivariate analysis was also performed., Results: IL-35 overexpression was associated with: skin ulceration, tumor necrosis, mitotic index, nuclear pleomorphism, tumor differentiation, histological grade of malignancy (HGM), neoplastic intravascular emboli and lymph node metastasis. Additionally, IL-35 was also correlated with a worse overall survival in multivariate analysis, arising as an independent predictor of poor prognosis., Conclusion: IL-35 is associated with carcinogenesis and worse prognosis of CMT., (Copyright© 2019, International Institute of Anticancer Research (Dr. George J. Delinasios), All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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