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Survivin as a marker of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and high-risk human papillomavirus and a predictor of virus clearance and prognosis in cervical cancer.

Authors :
Branca, Margherita
Giorgi, Colomba
Santini, Donatella
Di Bonito, Luigi
Ciotti, Marco
Costa, Silvano
Benedetto, Arrigo
Casolati, Elena A
Favalli, Cartesio
Paba, Pierluigi
Di Bonito, Paola
Mariani, Luciano
Syrjänen, Stina
Bonifacio, Donatella
Accardi, Luisa
Zanconati, Francesca
Syrjänen, Kari
Source :
American Journal of Clinical Pathology; July 2005, Vol. 124 Issue: 1 p113-121, 9p
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

We analyzed survivin as a marker of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) and high-risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV) and a predictor of HPV clearance and disease outcome in cervical cancer in 302 samples (squamous cell carcinomas [SCCs], 150; CIN lesions, 152) by immunohistochemical staining with survivin antibody and HPV testing using polymerase chain reaction. HR-HPV types were associated closely with CIN and SCC. There was a significant linear relationship between grade and intensity of survivin expression (P = .0001). Survivin overexpression also was associated strongly with HR-HPV type (P = .0001). Multivariate regression analysis revealed survivin and p16(INK4a) as equally strong independent predictors of HR-HPV. Deregulated survivin expression did not predict clearance or persistence of HR-HPV after treatment of CIN or survival in cervical cancer in univariate (P = .417) or multivariate analysis. After adjustment for HR-HPV, stage, age, and tumor grade in the Cox regression model, only stage (P = .0001) and age (P = .0001) remained independent prognostic predictors. Survivin seems to be an early marker of cervical carcinogenesis. Up-regulated survivin expression was an independent predictor of HR-HPV in cervical lesions, most plausibly explained by its normal transcriptional repression by wild-type p53 being eliminated by HR-HPV E6 oncoprotein.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00029173 and 19437722
Volume :
124
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
American Journal of Clinical Pathology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs38358058
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1309/L8BWF431WU9AC8FJ