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Molecular subclassification of vulvar squamous cell carcinoma: reproducibility and prognostic significance of a novel surgical technique

Authors :
Emily F Thompson
Lynn Hoang
Anne Kathrin Höhn
Andrea Palicelli
Karen L Talia
Nairi Tchrakian
Janine Senz
Rosebud Rusike
Suzanne Jordan
Amy Jamieson
Jutta Huvila
Jessica N McAlpine
C Blake Gilks
Michael Höckel
Naveena Singh
Lars-Christian Horn
Source :
International Journal of Gynecologic Cancer. 32:977-985
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ, 2022.

Abstract

ObjectivesVulvar squamous cell carcinoma is subclassified into three prognostically relevant groups: (i) human papillomavirus (HPV) associated, (ii) HPV independent p53 abnormal (mutant pattern), and (iii) HPV independent p53 wild type. Immunohistochemistry for p16 and p53 serve as surrogates for HPV viral integration andTP53mutational status. We assessed the reproducibility of the subclassification based on p16 and p53 immunohistochemistry and evaluated the prognostic significance of vulvar squamous cell carcinoma molecular subgroups in a patient cohort treated by vulvar field resection surgery.MethodsIn this retrospective cohort study, 68 cases treated by vulvar field resection were identified from the Leipzig School of Radical Pelvic Surgery. Immunohistochemistry for p16 and p53 was performed at three different institutions and evaluated independently by seven pathologists and two trainees. Tumors were classified into one of four groups: HPV associated, HPV independent p53 wild type, HPV independent p53 abnormal, and indeterminate. Selected cases were further interrogated by (HPV RNA in situ hybridization,TP53sequencing).ResultsFinal subclassification yielded 22 (32.4%) HPV associated, 41 (60.3%) HPV independent p53 abnormal, and 5 (7.3%) HPV independent p53 wild type tumors. Interobserver agreement (overall Fleiss’ kappa statistic) for the four category classification was 0.74. No statistically significant differences in clinical outcomes between HPV associated and HPV independent vulvar squamous cell carcinoma were observed.ConclusionInterobserver reproducibility of vulvar squamous cell carcinoma subclassification based on p16 and p53 immunohistochemistry may support routine use in clinical practice. Vulvar field resection surgery showed no significant difference in clinical outcomes when stratified based on HPV status.

Details

ISSN :
15251438 and 1048891X
Volume :
32
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Gynecologic Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3ae0faf5d18e1eeb2116ee17af9c0134