Gene/Protein
Disease
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Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P04626 (
erbB-2
)
5,251
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Low grade breast cancers i.e. mucinous (17 cases--3.2%), tubular (7 cases--1.3%) and invasive cribriform carcinomas (3 cases--0.5%) have been identified within a series of 524 breast cancers only by histotyping in hematoxylin-eosin stained sections: the reactivities of immunohistochemical prognosticators as estrogen/progesterone receptors (ER, PgR), growth fraction (GF: Ki67), p53 and c-
erbB-2
oncoproteins are in agreement with clinical behaviours. Invasive papillary carcinomas (9 cases--1.6%) are not to be considered low grade carcinomas. Intermediate grade cancers are also determined by histotyping.
Medullary carcinoma
(13 cases--3.4%) has a paradoxical behaviour displaying a favourable clinical prognosis together with high grading and GF, absence of ER, PgR, high p53 and c-
erbB-2
values, as compared with invasive ductal carcinomas: an extensive tissue immune response as suggested by a heavy lymphocyte infiltration may explain this behaviour. Invasive lobular carcinoma (62--11.6%) shows an intermediate immunohistochemical pattern, paralleling an intermediate prognosis, when compared with low and high grade carcinomas: ER, PgR and GF positivities are nearly the same as in ductal carcinomas whereas grading, p53 and c-
erbB-2
are less expressed. These data are confirmed both for lobular carcinomas as a whole and for all variants of this kind of tumors. Invasive ductal carcinomas (413 cases--79%) may be stratified on three prognostic classes corresponding to histological grading (G1, G2, G3). Significant relationships of grading with all the immunohistochemical prognosticators studied has been observed. It may be concluded that grading is a parameter of paramount importance in this group of tumors.
...
PMID:Low, intermediate and high grade breast carcinomas as determined by histotyping, immunohistochemical prognosticators and histological grading. 132 96
Low-grade adenosquamous carcinoma of the breast is a variant of metaplastic mammary carcinoma characterized by a locally invasive growth pattern and a low risk for metastases. In this study none of the carcinomas exhibited greater than 5 percent nuclear immunoreactivity for estrogen or progesterone receptors, and as a result they were classified as negative for these receptors. Reactivity for cathepsin D was found in 39 percent of the tumors, largely limited to areas of epidermoid differentiation. Membrane immunoreactivity for
HER-2/neu
oncogenes was present in glandular components of 46 percent of the carcinomas. Immunoreactivity for p53 (greater than 10 percent of nuclei) was present in 13 percent of the tumors, also in glandular elements. Six different patterns of coexpression of p53,
HER-2/neu
and cathepsin D were found, the most frequent being the following:
HER-2/neu
(+), p53(-), cathepsin D(-) (9 cases, 39%); cathepsin D(+), p53(-),
HER-2/neu
(-) (5 cases, 22%); and the three markers negative (5 cases, 22 percent). Coexpression of the two oncogenes was found in only one tumor which was also positive for cathepsin D. These results indicate that the expression of various immunohistochemical prognostic markers may be heterogeneous and that there may not be a specific pattern of marker coexpression within a carefully defined histologic subtype of mammary carcinoma. Furthermore, characteristics reported to be associated with an unfavorable prognosis (negative hormone receptors, presence of cathepsin D, and expression of oncogenes such as
HER-2/neu
) may be found in a substantial proportion of tumors that comprise this clinically and histologically low-grade variant of mammary carcinoma. This disassociation between expected prognosis based on expression of current prognostic markers and observed prognosis occurs in other forms of mammary carcinoma.
Medullary carcinoma
, when diagnosed on the basis of rigorously defined criteria, has an excellent prognosis despite the fact that these tumors are characterized by absence of estrogen and progesterone receptors and a high proliferative rate. The histological classification of mammary carcinomas is itself an important prognostic variable that may take precedence over selected biochemical markers.
...
PMID:The pathology of low-grade adenosquamous carcinoma of the breast. An immunohistochemical study. 793 47