Faculty of Medicine
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Item type:Publication, Prognostic significance of the HPV status in early stage cervical carcinoma(Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 2006-09) ;Kubelka-Sabit, Katerina ;Prodanova, Irina ;Yashar, Genghis ;Zografski, GeorgeAims: In order to evaluate their prognostic significance, the parameters of the human papilloma virus (HPV) status were correlated to the lympho-nodal and tumor status, maximal diameter, minimal thickness of uninvolved stroma, histologic type, grade of differentiation, lympho-vascular space invasion, degree of lymphocytic inflammatory stromal reaction at the invasion front, age and the disease-free survival (DFS) of the patients with early stage invasive cervical carcinomas. Material and methods: 77 cases of cervical carcinomas, limited to the uterus, surgically treated and postoperatively irradiated, were selected for this retrospective study. HPV DNA status (presence and HPV type, type of hybridization signal and number of positive cells per sample) was evaluated using sensitive in situ hybridization detection kit with catalyzed signal amplification with biotinylated probes for types 6/11, 16/18 and 31/33 or 31/33/51. Results: The presence of HPV DNA was detected in 45 (58.4%) cases. Thirty-two (71.1%) showed positivity for HPV type 16/18, 8 (17.8%) for 31/33, whereas multiple infection was detected in (8.9%) 4 cases. Dot hybridization signal was found in 31 (68.9%), diffuse in 2 (4.4%) and mixed in 12 (26.7%) cases. More than five positive nuclei per sample were found in 37 (82.2%) of the cases. Only the presence of HPV was associated with absence of regional lymph node involvement, presence of moderate/abundant lymphocytic infiltration and longer 5 and 10-year DFS. Conclusions: According to our results, more extensive studies are needed to assess the real prognostic influence of the other parameters of HPV status in early stage cervical carcinomas. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Small and large cell neuroendocrine carcinomas of the uterine cervix. A report of 10 cases.(Springer, 2005-08) ;Kubelka-Sabit, Katerina ;Plaseska-Karanfilska, Dijana ;Prodanova, Irina ;Yashar, GenghisHadzi-Nicheva, BiljanaBACKGROUND: Small (SCC) and large cell (LCC) neuroendocrine carcinomas of the uterine cervix are rare and highly aggressive neoplasms. Their association with the integration of human papilloma virus (HPV) DNA of the types 16 or 18 has been documented in many studies. AIMS: The purpose of this study is to present the clinical, histopathological, immunohistochemical characteristics and the presence of HPV DNA in ten cases of SCCs and LCCs of the uterine cervix. METHODS: Seven patients with primary SCCs and three patients with LCCs of the uterine cervix were diagnosed at our department between 1989 and 2004. Clinical data were retrieved from the patients’ files and included age, recurrence and survival. Routinely processed operative and/or biopsy specimens were used for immunohistochemical stains and hybridization procedures. Primary antibodies against several epithelial, neuroendocrine, mesenchimal and proliferative markers were included. The presence of HPV DNA was assessed by conventional in situ hybridization (ISH) using probes for HPV 16/18 and 31/33/51 and polymerase chain reaction (PCR), using three primers (MY09/11, GP5+/GP6+, E6). Six of the patients were surgically treated. Postoperatively, four received chemo and/or radiotherapy, two rejected further treatment and one patient was lost to follow-up. The other four patients underwent conservative treatment due to advanced disease. RESULTS: The patients’ age ranged from 25 to 71 years. Histologically, the tumors showed trabecular, nesting or a sheet-like pattern, with areas of necrosis and frequent mitoses. Their neuroendocrine nature was confirmed by diffuse positive immunostaining for neuron-specific enolase and low-molecular weight cytokeratins. Focal positivity for chromogranin, synaptophysin and S100, together with pancytokeratin and EMA, was evident in the majority of the tumors. Their aggressive potential was confirmed by high Ki-67 proliferative index (50-90%). HPV types 16/18 were found in 4 tumors using ISH, and HPV 16 in additional 3, using PCR (type 16). 3 of the patients developed distant metastases and died 7-48 months after receiving partial or full treatment, while 6 are alive and without evidence of disease after 4-38 months. CONCLUSIONS: SCCs and LCCs are highly aggressive neoplasms. However, early diagnosis and combined therapy may improve survival in some patients. Although mainly a morphologic diagnosis, immunohistochemistry may help in the diagnosis of SCC and LCC. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Ki-67 expression in the invasion front as an additional independent significant prognostic factor influencing reccurence in early stage cervical carcinomas.(Springer, 2005-08); ;Prodanova, Irina ;Kubelka-Sabit, KaterinaYashar, GenghisINTRODUCTION: The attempts to determine the prognostic significance of biological markers and their relation to human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in cervical cancer have yielded controversial results. AIMS: The aims of this retrospective study were to correlate alterations of cell proliferation, growth, differentiation and apoptosis regulatory proteins in early stage cervical carcinomas with HPV infection, histopathological and clinical parameters, and to estimate their prognostic significance. METHODS: Expression of Ki-67, p53, mdm-2, bcl-2, c-erbB-2, EGFR protein, as well as estrogen and progesterone receptors was evaluated by immunohistochemistry in operative specimens of 83 patients with early stage cervical carcinoma. The results were assessed semiquantitatively in the surface area, center and invasion front of each tumor as a percentage of the immunostained cells and/or intensity of immunostaining for each protein. The presence of HPV was assessed by conventional in situ hybridization (ISH) technique and catalyzed reporter deposition signal amplification ISH using mixed biotinylated probes to identify types 6/11, 16/18 and 31/33 or 31/33/51. RESULTS: In our case series 73 patients had a tumor limited to the uterine cervix less than 4 cm in diameter (pT1b1), while 10 patients had larger neoplasms belonging to pT1b2 category. Pelvic lymph node involvement was found in 20 patients. During the follow-up period (range, 65 -181, mean, 121 months) recurrences were observed in 9 patients. The 5, 10 and 15-year disease-free survival rate was 92.7%, 90.8% and 86.6%, respectively. Among the 18 variables pelvic lymph node involvement (P=0.0008), tumor diameter (P=0.035), depth of stromal invasion (P=0.029), histotype (P=0.0009), grade (P=0.056), HPV DNA presence (P=0.056), HPV type (P=0.043), as well as bcl-2 (P=0.035), mdm-2 (P=0.051), EGFR (P<0.0001), and Ki-67 (P=0.031) expression in the tumor’s invasion front were identified as important predictive indicators of recurrence in the univariate analysis. Independent significant prognostic factors for disease-free survival in multivariate analysis were the histotype, HPV DNA presence and Ki-67 expression. CONCLUSIONS: The invasive front of carcinomas proved to be the most important area for tumor prognosis. In addition to the detection of HPV presence and morphological parameters, Ki-67 evaluation could be used in selecting appropriate therapeutical approaches in patients with early stage cervical cancer. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Potential prognostic significance of apoptosis related oncogenes: p53, bcl-2 and mdm-2 in early stage cervical carcinoma(2003-09) ;Prodanova, Irina ;Yashar, Genghis ;Kubelka-Sabit, Katerina ;Zografski, GeorgeIntroduction: Evaluations of expression of apoptosis related oncogenes are being increasingly called upon in an attempt to better understand the carcinogenesis of cervical carcinoma and to provide possible prognostic information. The aim of this study was to analyze the expression of bcl-2, p53 and mdm-2 oncoproteins and cellular proliferative marker Ki-67 in early stage cervical carcinoma, with an emphasis on their association with human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, recurrence rate and lymph node status. Material and methods: Using immunohistochemistry, 69 radical hysterectomy specimens with cervical carcinoma (pT1b1/pT1b2) were studied. Evaluation of expression of p53, bcl-2, mdm-2 and Ki-67 was performed in surface area, center and invasion front of the neoplasms. The HPV presence was determined by CARD in situ hybridization. Results and conclusion: In the invasion front bcl-2 was expressed in 31 (45%), p53 in 37 (53%) and mdm-2 in 33 (47%) cases. HPV infection was detected in 40 (58%) cases. Carcinomas with a higher Ki-67 labeling index were more frequently HPV positive than HPV negative (82.5% vs 17.5%, p<0.01). No association was found between p53, mdm-2 or Ki-67 and either lymph node status or recurrence rate. Negative staining for bcl-2 was associated only with the presence of lymph node metastasis (74% vs 26%, p=0.05), and not with the recurrence rate. Significant correlation among expression of bcl-2, p53, mdm-2 oncoprotein and Ki-67 values was also observed. These results suggest that further study of a larger series is needed to confirm whether bcl-2, either alone or in combined evaluation with other markers, could be a useful marker to identify more aggressive behavior in early stage cervical carcinoma. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Iimmunohistochemical expression of c-erbb-2 in early stage cervical carcinoma: Correlation with human papillomavirus infection and prognosis.(Springer, 2003-09); ;Yashar, Genghis ;Kubelka-Sabit, Katerina ;Prodanova, IrinaZografski, GeorgeIntroduction: The attempts to determine the prognostic significance of c-erbB-2 oncoprotein expression (OPE) and its relation to human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in cervical cancer have yielded controversial. The aim of this study was to evaluate the patterns of c-erbB-2 OPE in early stage cervical carcinoma and to assess its prognostic value by exploring its relationships to various clinicopathological characteristics, HPV status and recurrence rate. Materials and methods: Radical hysterectomy specimens from 71 cervical carcinoma patients (pT1b1/1b2) were investigated immunohistochemically for c-erbB-2 presence. The c-erbB-2 score (range: 0-400) was determined in the surface area, center and invasion front of each carcinoma. CARD in situ hybridization was used for HPV detection. Results and conclusion: Strong c-erbB-2 OPE was detected in 21, 20, and 32 cases in the invasion front, center and surface area of the tumor, respectively. There was a significant difference in positive staining rate of c-erbB-2 between squamous cell, mixed carcinomas and adenocarcinomas (23%, 50% vs 83%, p=0.005). C-erbB-2 OPE was significantly higher in carcinomas with abundant than in tumors with less abundant peri-tumoral lymphocytic infiltration (36.5% vs 10.5%, p=0.032). In HPV positive carcinomas (41), c-erbB-2 was detected more frequently in type 31/33 versus type 16/18 lesions (75% vs 18.8%, p=0.002). No association was found between c-erbB-2 expression and recurrence rate, lymph node metastasis or any other clinicopathological variable investigated (age, tumor diameter, depth of invasion, grade, vascular invasion). Therefore, immunostaining for c-erbB-2 is unlikely to be of use as a prognostic indicator in early stage cervical carcinomas, while further study is warranted to examine relationships between HPV infection and c-erbB-2 OPE. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Determination of estrogen, progesterone receptor and ki-67 immunoreactivity in early stage cervical carcinoma: Association with human papillomavirus infection and prognosis.(Springer, 2003-09) ;Yashar, Genghis ;Prodanova, Irina ;Kubelka-Sabit, Katerina ;Zografski, GeorgeIntroduction: The predictive values of estrogen (ER) and progesterone receptor (PgR) status and cell proliferation kinetics in cervical carcinomas are still unsettled. The purpose of this study was to clarify the associations among ER/PgR status and Ki-67 expression and to determine their relationship to human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, recurrence rate and other clinicopathologic parameters (age, tumor diameter, depth of invasion, histotype, grade, vascular involvement, inflammatory infiltrate, lymph node status) in early stage cervical carcinomas. Materials and methods: ER, PgR and Ki-67 immunostaining was performed in 72 cervical carcinoma radical hysterectomy specimens (pT1b1/pT1b2). ER/PgR staining was scored in a semiquantitative fashion, while to evaluate the cell proliferation, the Ki-67 labelling index (LI) was assessed in the surface area, center and invasion front of each tumor. HPV status was determined by CARD in situ hybridization. Results and conclusion: ER positivity was detected in 11 (15%), while PgR positivity in 14 (20%) carcinomas. ER/PgR values were in correlation with Ki-67 LI in all three tumors' compartments (p<0.01). In contrast to ER/PgR status, Ki-67 LI was strongly associated with HPV infection (p<0.01). No relationship was found between PgR or Ki-67 immunoreactivity and either recurrence rate or any other clinicopathological variable investigated. Nevertheless, reduced ER expression was significantly associated with larger tumor diameter (p=0.04) and poor differentiation (p=0.03), as well as lymphovascular involvement (p=0.04) and lymph node metastases (p=0.02). These results suggest that ER, PgR and Ki-67 expression are closely related to neoplastic cell proliferation, probably induced by HPV infection. Their determination may provide additional prognostic information in early stage cervical carcinomas. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Common blue nevus of the uterine cervix - A report of 16 cases(Macedonian Association of Anatomists and Morphologists, 2005) ;Kubelka-Sabit, Katerina; ;Hadzi-Nicheva, Biljana ;Grncharovska, ZlataProdanova, IrinaBlue nevus is uncommon pigmented lesion of the skin that rarely appears in the different mucoses, such as cervix or vagina. Sixteen cases of cervical blue nevi were diagnosed in our department in a five-year period (2000-2004). Localized in the stroma of the cervical canal, predominantly in the posterior lip, the lesions measured 0.1-2 cm. Prussian blue stain excluded the presence of hemosiderin and Masson-Fontana, S100 and HMB-45 stains confirmed the melanocytic nature of the lesions. Our findings are similar to those published in several studies. The recognition of this obscure lesion prevents its misinterpretation as siderosis or malignant melanoma. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Evaluation of combined bcl-2/mdm-2 immunohistochemical expression as a prognostic factor in early stages of invasive cervical carcinomas(Springer, 2007-08) ;Prodanova, Irina ;Kubelka-Sabit, KaterinaBACKGROUND: The present study was designed to evaluate the immunohistochemical expression of apoptosis regulating proteins (bcl-2, mdm-2 and p53) in correlation with proliferation (Ki-67), human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and other histopathological and clinical parameters in early stage cervical carcinomas and the estimation of their prognostic significance. Special attention was given to combined bcl-2/mdm-2 immunophenotypes in predicting the recurrence of the disease. METHOD: The subject of this study was a series of 83 surgically treated patients with cervical carcinoma confined to the uterine cervix (pT1b1/1b2), who subsequently received complete radiotherapy. The presence of HPV DNA was determined by the conventional method of in situ hybridization (ISH) and catalyzed reporter deposition signal amplification ISH. The immunostaining was performed using avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method and the expression of the biological markers was semiquantitatively evaluated as the percentage of immunostained cells. RESULTS: During the clinical follow-up (mean 120.7, range 4.4-181 months) a relapse was diagnosed in 9 (10.8%) patients and the expected 5-, 10- and 15- year disease-free survival was 92.7%, 90.8% and 86.6%, respectively. The results of the univariate analysis indicate that significant predictive indicators for recurrence are: lymphonodal status, maximal tumor diameter, depth of stromal invasion, histological type and HPV DNA presence and type. Immunohistochemical markers showed the following correlations: increased expression of Ki-67 (P=0.031) and bcl-2 negativity (P=0.047) correlated with poor disease-free survival, while mdm-2 positivity showed borderline significance (P=0.051) and p53 expression had no influence on disease-free survival. Additional evaluation of combined bcl-2/mdm-2 expression showed that cases with bcl-2+/mdm-2- and bcl-2-/mdm-2+ immunophenotype had better survival (P=0.048) compared to bcl-2+/mdm-2+ and bcl-2-/mdm-2- phenotype. In the multivariate analysis, histological type, HPV DNA presence and the expression of Ki-67 have been selected as the most significant independent prognostic parameters (P=0.0024). CONCLUSION: The evaluation of combined bcl-2/mdm-2 immunohistochemical expression provides more relevant information for the prediction of the recurrence of the disease than their individual expression. However, neither individual expression of bcl-2 and mdm-2 nor their combined immunohistochemical expressions are independent predictors of prognosis in early stages of invasive cervical carcinomas. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Prognostic value of cell proliferation, growth and differentiation regulatory proteins in early stage cervical carcinoma(Springer, 2006-05); ;Yashar, Genghis ;Kubelka-Sabit, KaterinaProdanova, IrinaObjectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate the immunohistochemical expression of cell proliferation, growth, and differentiation regulatory proteins in early stage cervical carcinoma and to assess their prognostic value by exploring their relationships to various clinicopathological characteristics (age, lymph node involvement, tumor diameter, depth of invasion, thickness of uninvolved cervical stroma, histotype, grade, lymphvascular space invasion, inflammatory infiltrate), human papillomavirus (HPV) status and influence on disease-free survival. Methods: This retrospective study comprised 83 patients, all subjected to radical hysterectomy with bilateral pelvic lymphadenectomy for early stage cervical carcinoma and postoperative irradiation therapy. Expression of Ki-67, c-erbB-2, EGFR protein, as well as estrogen and progesterone receptors was evaluated by immunohistochemistry using avidinbiotin-peroxidase complex method. The results were assessed semiquantitatively in the surface area, center and invasive front of each tumor as the percentage of the immunostained cells and/or intensity of immunostaining for each protein. The presence of HPV was assessed by conventional in situ hybridization (ISH) technique and catalyzed reporter deposition signal amplification ISH using mixed biotinylated probes to identify types 6/11, 16/18 and 31/33 or 31/33/51. RESULTS: In our case series, 73 (88%) patients had a tumor limited to the uterine cervix less than 4 cm in diameter (pT1b1), while 10 (12%) patients had larger neoplasms belonging to pT1b2 category. Pelvic lymph node involvement was found in 20 (24%) patients. During the follow-up period (range, 65-181, mean, 121 months) recurrences were observed in 9 patients. The 5-, 10- and 15-year disease-free survival rate was 92.7%, 90.8% and 86.6%, respectively. Important predictive indicators of recurrence in the univariate analysis were pelvic lymph node involvement (P=0.0008), tumor diameter (P=0.035), depth of stromal invasion (P=0.029), histological type (P=0.0009), grade of differentiation (P=0.056), HPV DNA presence (P=0.056), HPV type (P=0.043), as well as Ki-67 (P=0.031), and EGFR protein (P=0.0066) expression in the tumor’s invasive front. Among these variables, however, the histological type, HPV DNA presence, Ki-67 and EGFR protein expression were identified as independent significant prognostic factors for disease-free survival in multivariate analysis using Cox regression model. Conclusions: The invasive front of carcinomas proved to be the most important area for the evaluation of prognostic significance of the expression of cell proliferation, growth, and differentiation regulatory proteins. In addition to the detection of HPV presence and morphological parameters, the evaluation of Ki-67 and EGFR protein expression may provide additional prognostic information in patients with early stage cervical carcinomas. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Immunohistochemical expression and prognostic significance of the biological markers bcl-2, p53, mdm-2 and ki-67 in early stages of invasive cervical carcinomas(Springer, 2006-05) ;Prodanova, Irina ;Kubelka-Sabit, Katerina ;Yashar, GenghisObjectives: The objectives of this study were the evaluation of the immunohistochemical expression of apoptosis regulating proteins (bcl-2, mdm-2 and p53 protein) in correlation with proliferation (Ki-67), human papillomavirus (HPV) infection and other histopathological and clinical parameters in early stage cervical carcinomas and estimation of their prognostic significance. Methods: The subject of this study was a series of 83 surgically treated patients with cervical carcinoma confined to the uterine cervix, who subsequently received complete radiotherapy. The presence of HPV DNA in the neoplasm was determined by the conventional method of in situ hybridization (ISH) and catalyzed reporter deposition signal amplification ISH using mixed biotinylated probes to identify types 6/11, 16/18 and 31/33 or 31/33/51. The immunohistochemical expression of the biological markers was semiquantitatively evaluated as the percentage of immunostained cells in the three compartments of the neoplasm: the surface, the middle layer and the invasive front. Results: 73 patients had a tumor confined to the uterine cervix less than 4 cm in diameter (pT1b1) and the other 10 had larger neoplasms that belong to the pT1b2 category. Regional lymph node involvement was found in 20 (24%) of the patients. During the clinical follow-up (mean, 120.7, range 4.4-181 months) a relapse was diagnosed in 9 (10.8%) patients, 6 of which (7.2%) died of the disease. The expected 5-, 10- and 15- year overall survival was 94.4%, 92.7% and 92.7%, and disease-free survival was 92.7%, 90.8% and 86.6%, respectively. The results of the univariate analysis indicate that significant predictive indicators for recurrence are: lymphonodal status, maximal tumor diameter, depth of stromal invasion, histological type, HPV DNA presence and type, and the immunohistochemical expression of bcl-2, mdm-2 and Ki-67 in the invasive front of the neoplasm. In the multivariate analysis, histological type, HPV DNA presence and the expression of Ki-67 in the invasive front have been selected as the most significant independent prognostic parameters (P=0.0024). The value of the prognostic index (PI), calculated using the Cox regression model, provided the basis on which the patients were classified into two distinct risk groups with significantly different disease-free survival period (P=0.0009). Conclusions: The results indicate that the invasive front of the neoplasms proved to be the most important area for the evaluation of immunohistochemical expression of biological markers. The prognostic index as an indicator of the patient’s place in the prognostic spectrum enables the identification of the risk group of patients in whom, due to a higher risk of relapse, better results are to be expected with the application of more aggressive therapy.
