Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Clinical data were retrieved from the hospital records of 34 patients with
Paget's disease of the vulva
treated from 1972 to 1990. Flow-cytometric (FCM) DNA measurements and
p53
and c-erbB-2 immunostaining were performed on paraffin-embedded samples. Five patients had an underlying adenocarcinoma and 29 intraepithelial disease (IEP). Twenty-seven patients with IEP underwent surgery. The surgical margins were positive in 15 patients, negative in 10, and not evaluable in 2. The tumor was diploid in 15 patients, nondiploid in 11, and not evaluable in 1. Eight patients recurred, 6/15 (40%) with positive and 2/10 (20%) with negative margins. One patient with positive margins was never disease-free. Recurrence was seen in 6/11 (55%) patients with nondiploid tumors, 4 with positive and 2 with negative margins. Two of 15 (13%) patients with diploid tumors recurred/persisted, both with positive margins. None of the 6 patients with diploid tumors and negative margins recurred.
p53
and c-erbB-2 were found negative in all but 4 patients. Tumor nondiploidy was associated with an increased risk of recurrence irrespective of surgical radicality.
p53
and c-erbB-2 seemed to play no role in the pathogenesis or prognosis.
...
PMID:DNA ploidy and expression of p53 and C-erbB-2 in extramammary Paget's disease of the vulva. 899 53
Molecular alterations that are associated with clinicopathological features of extramammary
Paget's disease of the vulva
(PDV) are poorly understood. Consequently, we have investigated whether a correlation exists between overexpression of
p53 protein
and various clinicopathologic features of PDV. Our study group comprises 10 primary noninvasive PDVs, 3 primary PDVs with minimal invasion, and 1 primary PDV with frank invasion. Recurrence in the form of noninvasive PDV was seen in 4 patients with previously noninvasive PDVs and in 1 patient who previously had PDV with minimal invasion. Metastases to the inguinal lymph nodes were associated with the 1 PDV with frank invasion and 1 of the PDVs with minimal invasion. An immunohistochemical study of
p53
expression was performed on paraffin-embedded tissue. Negative
p53
immunostaining was seen in all of the primary noninvasive PDVs as well as their recurrences. Positive
p53
immunostaining was observed in the invasive as well as the intraepidermal components of all of the primary PDVs with invasion, the metastatic tumors in the inguinal lymph nodes, and the recurrent PDV associated with prior invasion, indicating a possible role of
p53
in the progression of PDV. To our knowledge, our observation of
p53
overexpression in the intraepidermal component of PDVs associated with invasion is the first to be reported in the literature. This observation may prove helpful in identifying stromal invasion in small biopsies. We also report for the first time an association between high nuclear grade in PDV and the propensity for inguinal lymph node metastasis.
...
PMID:Overexpression of p53 is correlated with stromal invasion in extramammary Paget's disease of the vulva. 1456 83
This review discusses recent developments in vulvovaginal pathology. A variety of morphologically bland mesenchymal lesions occur at this site with considerable histological and immunohistochemical overlap. Aggressive angiomyxoma exhibits HMGA2 immunoreactivity in approximately 50% of cases, and this nuclear transcription factor is emerging as a useful and relatively specific marker for aggressive angiomyxoma, although occasional vulvovaginal smooth muscle neoplasms are positive. HMGA2 is useful in the diagnosis of aggressive angiomyxoma and its distinction from mimics, in the evaluation of resection margins and in the assessment of the presence or absence of residual disease in re-excisions. Aggressive angiomyxoma is almost invariably positive with oestrogen and progesterone receptors, and there have been several reports of a dramatic reduction in size following gonadotropin releasing hormone agonist therapy. Recent series of the relatively newly described entities cellular angiofibroma and superficial myofibroblastoma of the lower female genital tract have expanded upon the morphological spectrum of these neoplasms. Recently described mesenchymal lesions at this site include massive oedema and prepubertal vulval fibroma. Gastrointestinal stromal tumours have been described as primary neoplasms in the vagina, and rectovaginal septum and extragastrointestinal stromal tumour should be added to the differential diagnosis of a vulvovaginal mesenchymal lesion. Many mesenchymal lesions in the vulvovaginal region exhibit immunoreactivity with both CD34 and desmin, a somewhat unusual immunophenotype in mesenchymal lesions at other sites. It is now established that there are two distinct types of vulval intraepithelial neoplasia (VIN), most commonly termed classic and differentiated VIN, the former associated with human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. There are two corresponding types of vulval squamous carcinoma with HPV-associated and non-HPV-associated variants, the latter often arising in a vulval dystrophy and associated with
p53
mutation. However, in some cases there is clinicopathological overlap between HPV-associated and non-HPV-associated squamous carcinomas, and immunohistochemistry with p16 is more reliable than morphology in predicting the presence of HPV. There have been new developments regarding
Paget's disease of the vulva
with the identification of markers that are useful in diagnosis and evidence that the neoplastic cells represent a proliferation of adnexal stem cells residing in sebaceous units. The newly described entity vaginal tubulo-squamous polyp typically exhibits immunopositivity with prostatic markers, possibly indicating derivation from displaced periurethral Skene's glands.
...
PMID:Recent developments in vulvovaginal pathology. 1863 48