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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Five antibodies directed against the whole or part of
p53 protein
have been used to detect the protein immunohistochemically in 70 infiltrating breast carcinomas and 10 ductal carcinomas in situ. Mutations are known to occur in different conserved domains, and the antibodies employed spanned the expected sites.
p53 protein
was identified in 53 per cent of infiltrating carcinomas using the antibodies PAb 240, PAb 1801, C19, and JG8. The antibody PAb 421 detected the protein in 31.5 per cent; all positive with the other antibodies. Well-differentiated oestrogen receptor-positive tumours had a low incidence of
p53
detection. Variation in the percentage of reactivity was seen between carcinomas and in some cases between different antibodies in the same cancer. Those carcinomas with a high percentage of positive cells with all antibodies were more likely to have metastasized to nodes, be at an advanced stage, and be oestrogen receptor-negative/epidermal growth factor receptor-positive. There was no significant correlation with c-erbB-2 protein expression or retinoblastoma protein loss.
p53 protein
was detected in a high proportion of cells in three of the six
comedo
ductal carcinomas in situ studied but either not at all or at a lower level in tumours of the cribriform type.
p53
mutations are common in breast carcinomas, but heterogeneity within individual tumours is frequent. Marked expression of
p53
appears to relate to tumour progression.
...
PMID:Expression of p53 protein in infiltrating and in-situ breast carcinomas. 168 9
To clarify whether
p53 protein
expression is involved in multistep carcinogenesis or the progression of mammary ductal carcinoma, we investigated
p53 protein
expression in 83 invasive ductal carcinomas (IDC), 10 IDC with a predominant intraductal component, 13 non-invasive ductal carcinoma (NIDC), 16 atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) and 39 benign epithelial hyperplasia (EH), using immunohistochemistry. Expression of
p53 protein
was detected in 24 (28.9%) cases of IDC, 5 (50%) cases of IDC with a predominant intraductal component and 1 (7.6%) case of NIDC. No expression was observed in either ADH or EH. In IDC, including cases with a predominant intraductal component,
p53 protein
expression was associated with a higher histological grade (P < 0.0001) or mitotic index (P < 0.0005). Although overexpression of c-erbB-2 protein has also shown a similar association with these prognostic indicators, expression of
p53 protein
correlated regardless of the status of c-erbB-2 overexpression. Completely coordinated expression of
p53 protein
was seen in both intraductal and invasive components. The intraductal component in IDC including cases with a predominant intraductal component which expresses
p53 protein
had significantly higher histological grade (P < 0.0005) or more
comedo
-subtypes (P < 0.0001). These results suggested that
p53 protein
expression occurs at a stage of NIDC with high histological grade or in
comedo
-subtypes. Its expression is maintained throughout invasion.
...
PMID:Expression of p53 protein in benign epithelial hyperplasia, atypical ductal hyperplasia, non-invasive and invasive mammary carcinoma: an immunohistochemical study. 791 68
The clinicopathological and immunocytochemical features of nine cases of salivary duct carcinoma are described. This relatively rare tumour, which only recently has been widely recognized as a separate entity, is highly malignant and caused the death in eight of the patients. The tumour cells are arranged in cribriform and solid growth patterns, where the solid tumour nests frequently have
comedo
necrosis, and a fibrous, often sclerotic, stroma is present. The infiltrating desmoplasmic component and the diffuse invasive growth into adjacent adipose parotid tissue have similarities to ductal breast carcinoma. Immunocytochemical investigation of salivary duct carcinoma showed constant overexpression of c-erbB-2 as detected by membrane accentuation, and high proliferative activity as detected by nuclear positivity for MIB 1 (Ki-67). Changes in the expression of
p53
and retinoblastoma gene product do not constitute a constant event in salivary duct carcinoma. A few of the tumours showed scattered cells with distinct nuclear positivity for both progesterone and oestrogen receptors. We emphasize that this highly malignant salivary gland tumour has a characteristic morphology, may not be as rare as previously considered, and that prompt and aggressive therapy is needed.
...
PMID:Salivary duct carcinoma--a highly aggressive salivary gland tumour with overexpression of c-erbB-2. 793 25
Immunohistochemical expression of the
cellular phosphoprotein p53
was investigated in archival, formalin-fixed, and paraffin-embedded surgical breast tissue specimens from 543 patients using the polyclonal antibody CM-1. Cytometric DNA assessments were performed on histopathologically or cytopathologically identified cell nuclei using image analysis. The series included five samples of normal resting breast parenchyma, 35 benign lesions including benign tumors, 54 hyperplastic lesions with and without atypia, 109 carcinomas in situ, and 340 invasive adenocarcinomas. In 56 of the latter cases specimens from corresponding lymph node metastases also were investigated. Mutant p53 protein expression was absent in normal resting parenchyma and in benign lesions, including benign tumors and epithelial hyperplasias. However, 14 of the 54 hyperplasias (26%) were found to be of DNA aneuploid type. Thirteen of 109 (12%) carcinomas in situ and 79 of 340 (23%) invasive neoplasms expressed the mutant p53 protein. Eight of nine (89%)
p53
immunoreactive carcinomas in situ and 62 of 78 (80%) invasive carcinomas with
p53
expression were DNA aneuploid. In invasive carcinomas
p53
expression was absent in well differentiate neoplasms. In contrast, 58 of 158 (37%) poorly differentiated invasive carcinomas immuoreacted. Intraductal carcinomas of
comedo
type and poorly differentiated invasive carcinomas of
comedo
type expressed the mutant p53 protein in seven of 18 cases (39%) and in 14 of 22 cases (64%), respectively. The staining behavior of lymph node metastases was the same as that of the corresponding primary tumors. The present findings suggest that chromosomal alterations as indicated by DNA aneuploidy occur in precancerous lesions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical expression of the mutant p53 protein and nuclear DNA content during the transition from benign to malignant breast disease. 795 68
In 50 in situ breast cancers an immunohistochemical study, evaluating estrogen (ER) and progesterone (PR) receptors, Proliferation Index (PI), c-erbB-2/Neu and
p53
expression was performed. According to histopathological diagnosis, cases were classified as follows: 14
comedo
, 8 solid, 5 micropapillary, 6 lobular, 3 papillary, 1 apocrine and 12 mixed in situ carcinomas. The quantitation of immunohistochemical results was obtained with an image analysis computerized system (CAS 200) with a lesion-field method; tumors were subdivided in fields (1177) histologically homogeneous, with 40 x microscopic objective. For ER, PR, Neu and
p53
, 10% of the positive area was used as cut-off value; 13% was used for PI. Cribriform and lobular types showed a higher positivity for ER (92.1% and 95.5% of the fields); cribriform and papillary a higher for PR (92.6% and 93.9%).
Comedo
variant demonstrated the higher PI (52.7%), Neu and
p53
expression (67.7% and 43%). A cluster analysis performed on 608 fields, defined two groups according to biological homogeneous criteria. The results obtained identify the different biophenotypes of in situ carcinomas, suggesting the possibility of multiple cancerogenetic ways with a different weight of biological events.
...
PMID:Biophenotypes of breast carcinoma in situ defined by image analysis of biological parameters. 869 11
Endocrine ductal carcinoma in situ (E-DCIS), first characterized by Cross et al. in 1985, is an uncommon entity, and there is little information on its pathobiologic features and natural history in the literature. This report describes the largest series of 34 cases: 14 cases were pure in situ (group A), and 20 were accompanied by an invasive component (group B). All except three patients were over the age of 60 years, with the mean being 69.5 years for group A and 72.6 years for group B. Except for six patients in group A who had nipple discharge, all had a breast mass. On follow-up, one of five group A patients developed local recurrence 5 years after mastectomy, and two of seven group B patients developed another invasive primary in the contralateral breast. Histologically, E-DCIS showed expansile intraductal growths forming solid sheets and festoons traversed by delicate fibrovascular septa. Accumulation of basophilic mucin might be found within the growth and the fibrovascular septa. There were variable degrees of stromal sclerosis. In some cases, the solid intraductal cellular proliferations were focally punctuated by microglandular spaces and rosettes.
Comedo
necrosis was absent. Intraductal papillomas were found in the immediate vicinity of the tumors in 18 cases and invariably showed pagetoid involvement by E-DCIS. Pagetoid spread into the adjacent ducts and ductules was also a common feature (17 cases). The tumor cells were polygonal, oval, or spindly, often with eccentrically placed, bland-looking, ovoid nuclei and abundant eosinophilic granular cytoplasm. Intracellular mucin was commonly demonstrable. Immunostaining for myoepithelium using muscle-specific actin antibody confirmed the in situ nature of the E-DCIS component. The majority of tumor cells showed strong staining with the neuroendocrine markers chromogranin, synaptophysin, and neuron-specific enolase (monoclonal). Immunostaining also dramatically highlighted the pagetoid spread into the papillomas and ductules by outlining the tumor cells between the negatively stained residual ductal epithelium and myoepithelium. All cases were immunoreactive for estrogen and progesterone receptor, but not
p53
and c-erbB2. The Ki-67 index was < 5%. Ultrastructural studies on four cases showed many dense-core neurosecretory granules and larger mucigen granules. In group B cases, the invasive component, which comprised 5-95% of the tumor, included colloid carcinoma, 12; "carcinoid" tumor, 3; mixed "carcinoid"/colloid carcinoma, 4; and small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma, 1. Neuroendocrine markers were also consistently demonstrable in the invasive component. In conclusion, E-DCIS is predominantly a disease of older women that is frequently accompanied by papillomas in the vicinity and may present as nipple discharge (an uncommon presentation in the usual forms of DCIS). It can mimic epitheliosis histologically, but the pagetoid spread is a helpful clue to its neoplastic nature. The bland nuclear morphology, lack of necrosis, and biologic marker profile suggest that E-DCIS is a form of low-grade DCIS despite its solid growth pattern. The invasive carcinomas associated with E-DCIS are also neuroendocrine programmed rather than the usual types of ductal carcinomas, suggesting that E-DCIS represents a biologically distinctive category of DCIS.
...
PMID:Endocrine ductal carcinoma in situ (E-DCIS) of the breast: a form of low-grade DCIS with distinctive clinicopathologic and biologic characteristics. 871 93
In the last 6 years a number of non-randomized, predominantly single institutional trials of breast conservation therapy (BCT) with DCIS, have demonstrated that it constitutes a very heterogeneous group of diseases with markedly different risks of local recurrence and invasive transformation. There has been a consensus that DCIS, which exhibits a "comedo" morphology, generally defines a high risk group. Most studies, moreover, have identified the same two features, nuclear grade and necrosis, as contributing most significantly to prognosis. Nuclear grade and necrosis have been identified as independent prognostic variables in several studies. High nuclear grade DCIS which exhibits
comedo
necrosis defines the majority of all DCIS which will result in local recurrence and invasive transformation after BCT. Studies utilizing image cytometry, to determine ploidy and S-phase fraction and immunohistochemical studies of proliferation and oncogene distribution have shown a significant association with morphologically identified high nuclear grade and aneuploidy, high S-phase fraction or proliferation rate, presence of HER-2/neu and
P53
oncogenes and absence of estrogen receptors. Generally the inverse of this association is seen with low nuclear grade DCIS. However, initial hopes that these adjunctive studies would identify subsets within the high nuclear grade group which might be more likely to recur have not been fulfilled.
...
PMID:Classification of duct carcinoma in situ (DCIS) with a characterization of high grade lesions: defining cohorts for chemoprevention trials. 902 6
Abnormalities in
p53
gene expression have been implicated in many inherited and sporadic forms of malignancies in humans. Immunohistochemical staining using monoclonal antibody D0-7 for the
p53 protein
expression was performed in 81 cases of pure DCIS, 14 benign breast lesions and 2 cases with normal breast tissue. Expression of
p53 protein
was detected in 15 (18.5%) cases of pure DCIS. Thirteen (25%) of the 52
comedo
type DCIS showed
p53 protein
expression compared with 2 (6.9%) of the 29 non-
comedo
types (P < 0.02).
p53 protein
expression was also associated with high nuclear grade (P < 0.001) and high mitotic index (P < 0.05). The pattern of
p53 protein
staining was diffuse in one
comedo
type DCIS, regional in 6
comedo
types, and focal in the remaining 8 cases (6
comedo
type and 2 micropapillary type DCIS). The patient with
comedo
type DCIS showing diffuse staining has a family history of breast cancer in the first and second degree relatives (sister and maternal aunt). Clinical follow-up data was available in 52 cases. Follow-up period ranged from 9 to 55 months. Three patients, who were primarily treated by local excision, have had a documented local recurrence in the form of residual tumor within a short interval of 5 to 11 months. In all these three patients both the original and the recurrent tumors are negative for
p53 protein
expression. The difference in the local recurrence rate between
p53
positive (0/15) and
p53
negative (3/37) cased does not reach statistical significance (p > 0.05). We interpret that the local tumor recurrence in these three cases within a short period after primary excision is due to the presence of residual tumor at the excision site and is independent of the
p53
gene alteration. It is concluded that
p53 protein
expression in DCIS is associated with
comedo
subtype, high nuclear grade, and high mitotic index, and is a promising new parameter to evaluate the cellular biology and prognosis of DCIS.
...
PMID:p53 protein expression in ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast. 906 12
Immunocytochemically detectable MT and
p53
have been found more commonly in
comedo
DCIS of the breast with high-grade cytology. The aim of this study is to confirm these findings and to investigate the relationship between MT and
p53
in a single large series of cases of DCIS of the breast. To this end, 127 cases of DCIS were classified histologically according to architecture, cytonuclear differentiation (grade), presence and extent of intraduct necrosis, and using the Van Nuys system. Sections were immunostained for
p53
and MT (E9) using established techniques, and the extent and intensity of staining were assessed semi-quantitively. The results confirmed that there was generally more MT and
p53
positivity in poorly differentiated (grade 3) DCIS with extensive necrosis and that MT expression was greater in grade 2 lesions than
p53
expression. However, overall there was no statistically significant correlation between
p53
and MT staining. The results indicate that MT and
p53
overexpression may arise from independent mechanisms in early breast neoplasia.
...
PMID:Immunoreactive p53 and metallothionein expression in duct carcinoma in situ of the breast. No correlation. 917 27
Recent experimental evidence obtained in Scid mice has suggested that the metastatic process is in large part epigenetically regulated and undergoes partial reversion once the metastatic process is completed: the metastatic colonies become more engaged in the process of growing in situ than actively metastasizing. Based on this experimental evidence, examples were sought of metastatic human cancers where similar reversion to an in situ growth state was occurring. Review of 200 cases of metastatic human breast cancer revealed a 21 per cent incidence of reversion to a ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) growth pattern within axillary nodal metastases. The revertant DCIS areas were characterized by an intact and circumferential basement membrane, as demonstrated by extracellular laminin and type IV collagen immunoreactivity. These revertant DCIS areas could be distinguished from primary DCIS, however, by the absence of surrounding myoepithelial cells in the former, identified in the latter by their positive maspin, S-100, and smooth muscle actin immunoreactivity. The pattern of revertant DCIS, poorly differentiated (
comedo
) (13 per cent), intermediate (non-
comedo
) (6 per cent), or well-differentiated (non-
comedo
) (2%), exhibited complete 100 per cent concordance with the primary DCIS pattern. The concordance of histological patterns held true for even the subtypes of DCIS determined by architectural pattern, such as the micropapillary or cribriform subtypes. Nuclear size by digital image analysis and Her-2/neu,
p53
, and Ki-67 status in the revertant DCIS also exhibited complete concordance with the primary DCIS counterparts. Cases exhibiting a revertant DCIS pattern tended to be ER-negative/EGFR-positive and exhibited significant nodal involvement (mean number, 9; mean area, 90 per cent) compared with cases lacking a revertant pattern (mean number, 4; mean area, 15 per cent) (P < 0.01) These findings suggest that reversion of the metastatic phenotype may also be occurring within autochthonous human metastasis.
...
PMID:'Revertant' DCIS in human axillary breast carcinoma metastases. 939 32
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