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Papillomavirus, p53 Alteration, and Primary Carcinoma of the Vulva

Authors :
Franco Rilke
M. Giarola
A. Longoni
Lucia D'Amato
De Palo G
Della Torre G
S. Pilotti
R. Donghi
M.A. Pierotti
Giuseppe Sampietro
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier, Europe PubMed Central
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 1995.

Abstract

Twenty-nine samples from 28 cases of vulvar squamous cell carcinoma, of which 13 fulfilled the criteria of the bowenoid subtype (mean age 45 years, range 31-68) and 16 of the usual subtype of invasive squamous cell carcinoma (ISCC) (mean age 67.5 years, range 34-83) were investigated for human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA, TP53 alterations, and mdm2 and bcl-2 gene product deregulation. Microscopically all the bowenoid subtype cases (group I) showed a high-grade intraepithelial (VIN 3, carcinoma in situ) lesion associated with early invasive carcinoma in six cases and overt invasive carcinoma in one. By contrast, no evidence of early carcinoma was present in the ISCCs (group II). By in situ hybridization and/or Southern blot hybridization or polymerase chain reaction (PCR), HPV DNA was detected in all cases of group I and in four of 16 cases (25%) of group II, two only by Southern blot after PCR. By single-strand conformation polymorphism and immunocytochemistry only wild-type TP53 and absence of detectable p53 product, respectively, were found in all cases of group I, i.e., in high-risk HPV-positive carcinomas, whereas mutations and/or p53 overexpression accounted for 75% in group II, i.e., in mainly HPV-negative carcinomas. The TP53 gene mutations observed in invasive carcinomas were significantly related to node-positive cases (p = 0.04). Taken together and in agreement with in vitro data, these results support the view that an alteration of TP53, gained either by interaction with viral oncoproteins or by somatic mutations, is a crucial event in the pathogenesis of vulvar carcinomas, but that TP53 mutations are mainly associated with disease progression. Finally, a preliminary immunocytochemical analysis seems to speak against the possible involvement of both MDM2 and BCL-2 gene products in the development of vulvar carcinoma.

Details

ISSN :
10529551
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diagnostic Molecular Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5018b27ca3bb8eb09309e90dcef6b65c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/00019606-199512000-00003