Cancer Detection and Prevention 29 (2005) 528–536 www.elsevier.com/locate/cdp
Correlation p53 expression and human papilloma virus deoxyribonucleic acid with clinical outcome in early uterine cervical carcinoma Akiko Ikuta MD*, Junko Saito MD, PhD, Tomomi Mizokami MD, Tsuyoshi Nakamoto MD, Masahiro Yasuhara MD, Fumie Nagata MD, Mayumi Nakajima MD, Izumi Matsuo MD, Katsuhiko Yasuda MD, PhD, Hideharu Kanzaki MD, PhD Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Kansai Medical University, 10–15 Fumizono-cho, Moriguchi Osaka 570-8507, Japan Accepted 15 September 2005
Abstract Background: In the present study we assessed whether expression of p53 protein or HPV DNA correlates with recurrence as well as several known prognostic factors in uterine cervical carcinoma. Methods: Forty-nine patients with FIGO stage IA–IIB who underwent hysterectomy between 1998 and 2002 were retrospectively studied. All 49 cancer tissue samples were used for immunohistochemical study. Twenty-five of 49 cases were also examined by PCR–RFLP for detection and typing of HPV DNA. Results: Twenty of 49 (40.8%) specimens demonstrated nuclear staining for p53. A significant association between p53 overexpression and age, hormonal status, FIGO stage, or recurrence was observed ( p = 0.02, 0.01, 0.03, 0.01). However, no significant association was found between p53 overexpression and lymph node metastases, parametrium involvement, or risk of death ( p = 0.18, 0.06, 0.14). Nineteen of 25 (76%) were HPV DNA-positive and 6 (24%) were negative. Discussion: There was no relation between HPV DNA positivity and age, FIGO stage, lymph node metastases, parametrium involvement, recurrence, or risk of death. Conclusion: p53 overexpression is associated with age, hormonal status, FIGO stage, and recurrence in uterine cervical carcinoma. # 2005 International Society for Preventive Oncology. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Keywords: Uterine cervical carcinoma; p53; Immunohistochemical study; Human papilloma virus (HPV); Prognosis; Recurrence; Metastases; Clinical outcome; Hormonal status; HPV DNA
1. Introduction Uterine cervical carcinoma is one of the most prevalent forms of carcinoma found in women worldwide, accounting for almost 12% of all carcinomas in women [1]. The development and progression of carcinoma are considered multi-step processes in which host genetic as well as environmental factors may be involved [2–4]. Several epidemiologic studies have implicated human papilloma virus (HPV) infection, especially HPV types 16 and 18, in * Corresponding author. Tel.: +81 6 6992 1001; fax: +81 6 6992 3438. E-mail address:
[email protected] (A. Ikuta).
carcinogenesis of uterine cervical carcinoma. Furthermore, HPV types 31, 33, 35, 39, 45, 52, and 58 have been detected in this carcinoma, though less frequently [5–7]. The most commonly identified carcinoma-related gene alteration, however, is mutation of the p53 tumor suppressor gene [2,4,8–10]. The p53 gene encodes a 53 kDa nuclear phosphoprotein (p53) involved in cell cycle regulation, and normal cells containing wild-type p53 results in cell cycle arrest, leading either to DNA repair or apoptotic cell death [2,4,8–10]. It has also been shown that genes that have undergone mutations can function not only as tumor suppressors but also as dominant transforming genes eliciting malignant transformation, similar to proto-oncogene
0361-090X/$30.00 # 2005 International Society for Preventive Oncology. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.cdp.2005.09.002
A. Ikuta et al. / Cancer Detection and Prevention 29 (2005) 528–536
[2,4,8–10]. The loss of wild-type p53 protein or mutation of this protein may lead to oncogenic activity [2,4,8–13]. In addition to carcinogenesis, several studies have also reported an association between p53 mutation and tumor progression, metastasis, or prognoses in human solid malignancies, including gynecologic carcinoma [2,10,11, 14,15]. In particular, the E6 protein of the high-risk HPV forms a complex with p53, resulting in degradation of p53 protein [3,9,10,16–20]. This in turn obviates the arrest of the cell cycle at the G1/S interphase, allowing the continued replication of the DNA damaged cells, leading to genome instability and accumulation of mutations [3,9,10,16–20]. p53 protein is unstable and has a half-life of only 20– 30 min, while the mutant p53 protein is more stable and has a prolonged half-life [8,10,21]. Consequently, expression of p53 protein is easily detectable by immunohistochemical techniques [8,10,21]. In uterine cervical carcinoma, prognostic factors such as clinical stage, lymph node metastases, or parametrium involvement have been established [22,23]. We need new prognostic factors, however, to identify patients at low-risk of recurrence who could be offered a more conservative therapy and patients at high-risk of recurrences who should be offered more intensive treatment. In this study, we investigated the relation between p53 overexpression and HPV DNA and disease outcome.
2. Materials and methods 2.1. Patients The study was performed on primary uterine cervical carcinoma tissue samples from 49 patients undergoing hysterectomy at the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Kansai Medical University, between 1998 and 2002. Patients had received neither radiotherapy nor chemotherapy before surgery. Postoperatively, adjuvant radiotherapy was administrated in cases with lymph node metastases, parametrial involvement, or marked vascular space infiltration. Forty-nine patients completed the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) standard treatment: 20 (40.8%) to surgery alone, 8 (16.3%) to surgery plus radiotherapy, 18 (36.7%) to chemoradiation therapy, and 3 (6.1%) to chemotherapy. The median age of patients was 45 years, ranging from 30 to 90 years. Twenty-one patients were aged 39 years or younger, and 28 were aged 40 years or older. Thirty-one patients were premenopausal status, and 18 were postmenopause. The clinical stage of uterine cervical carcinoma was determined by FIGO classification and histologically assessed according to the World Health Organization (WHO) criteria. Patients with cervical carcinoma included 8 (16.3%) in stage IA, 29 (59.2%) in stage IB, 1 (2%) in stage IIA, and 11 (22.4%) in stage IIB, and the histology included 36 patients (73.5%) with squamous cell carci-
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noma, 11 (22.4%) with adenocarcinoma, and 2 (4.1%) with adenosquamous carcinoma. All tissue samples were used for immunohistochemical examination, while 25 cancerous tissue samples were examined for HPV identification and typing. Specimens obtained at surgery were immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at 80 8C until DNA extraction or Western blot analysis. DNA from specimens was extracted according to the standard SDS–proteinase K procedure [19]. 2.2. Immunohistochemistry for p53 protein p53 was detected with the mouse monoclonal antibody p53, clone DO-7, which recognizes wild-type and mutant forms of the p53 protein. All tissue blocks had been fixed in 10% formalin and embedded in paraffin. The specimens were classified based on hematoxylin and eosin-stained sections using conventional histologic criteria. Furthermore, 3 mm thick sections were cut serially and mounted on 3aminopropyltriethoxy-silane-coated glass slides for immunohistochemical studies. The streptavidin–biotin complex peroxidase (SAB) method (Histofine SAB-PO kit; NICHIREI Corp., Tokyo, Japan) was used. Briefly, the tissue sections were first deparaffinized in xylene, then rehydrated in a graded alcohol series. Endogenous peroxidase activity was blocked with 0.3% hydrogen peroxide in methanol. The sections were then washed in 0.01 M phosphate-buffered saline (PBS, pH 7.2), and a microwave antigen retrieval procedure using citrate buffer (pH 6.0) was performed. After microwave exposure, the slides were allowed to cool to room temperature then incubated for 15 min in 10% normal horse serum prior to the application of the primary antibody. Incubation with a mouse monoclonal antibody against p53 (DO-7 pre-diluted antibody; NICHIREI Corp., Tokyo, Japan) was performed for 60 min at room temperature. It is known that the E6 protein of the high-risk HPV forms a complex with p53, resulting in degradation of p53 protein [3,9,10,16–20]. Therefore, as a control a proliferation marker, immunohistochemical staining for Ki-67 (pre-diluted mouse monoclonal antibody; Zymed Laboratories Inc., USA) was performed for 3 h at room temperature. Antibody staining was developed with diaminobenzidine (DAB) for 10 min. The sections were then counterstained with hematoxylin, dehydrated in a graded alcohol series, cleared in xylene, and finally mounted in balsam. Negative control sections were treated identically, except that the specific antibodies were replaced by normal mouse serum. The sections of ovarian carcinomas known to express the investigated antigen were used as a positive control. p53 overexpression was evaluated under a double-headed microscope at 200-fold magnification. Five fields were chosen at random. Tumor cells on each section were counted to determine the percentage of positive cells. Staining was considered positive when more than 10% of the cells were nuclear-stained. These evaluations were made without
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knowledge of the patient’s clinicopathological characteristics or clinical outcome. 2.3. Typing of HPV DNA To ensure adequate DNA preparation, PCR amplification of beta globin was previously performed in a separate reaction using primers PCO3 (50 -ACA CAA CTG TGT TCA CTA GC-30 ) and PCO4 (50 -CAA CTT CAT CCA CGT TCA CC-30 ) with a product size of 110 bp as a control [24,25]. PCR was performed in a Takara PCR thermal cycler (Takara shuzo Co. Ltd., Japan) for 40 cycles of denaturation (94 8C, 1.0 min), annealing (40 8C, 2.0 min), and extension (72 8C, 1.5 min). Each reaction mixture (50 ml) contained the following: KCl (50 mM), Tris–HCl pH 8.3 (10 mM), MgCl2 (3.5 mM), dNTPs (200 mM each), primers PCO3 and PCO4 (50 pmol each), Taq polymerase (1 units), and pre-treated DNA solution (10 ml). In the present study, the reaction products were amplified by PCR using consensus primers for the L1 region (L1C1; 50 -CGT AAA CGT TTT CCC TAT TTT TTT-30 , L1C2; 50 -TAC CCT AAA TAC TAT GTATTG30 , and L1C2M; 50 -TAC CCT AAA-TAC CCT ATA TTG-30 ) for 40 cycles of denaturation (95 8C, 1.5 min), annealing (48 8C, 1.5 min), and extension (70 8C, 2.0 min), on the same thermal cycler. Because L1C2M increases the sensitivity of L1-PCR to HPV type 58 without decreasing sensitivity to other HPV types, this primer was added [24]. Each reaction mixture (100 ml) contained the following: KCl (50 mM), Tris–HCl pH 8.3 (10 mM), MgCl2 (1.5 mM), dNTPs (250 mM each), primer 1 (1 mM), primer 2, 3 (0.5 mM each), Taq polymerase (5 U), and DNA solution (1 mg). The negative control consisted of the reaction mix without DNA. After the reaction, 10 ml of the product was electrophoresed through 4% Nu SieveTM GTG agarose (Takara Shuzo Co. Ltd., Japan) gel, final stained with 1 mg/ ml ethidium bromide; the gel was then photographed under UV light. The length between these consensus primers is 244 bp in HPV types 6 and 11, 253 bp in types 16 and 18, and 256 bp in types 31 and 33 [24]. Specimens that were negative and untyped HPV (HPV X) with consensus primers were analyzed with type-specific primers (HPV detection set and HPV typing set; Takara Co. Ltd., Japan). The purpose of this primers was to maximize the identification of other HPV types not detected by the L1 consensus primers. In this case, PCR was 30 cycles of denaturation (94 8C, 0.5 min), annealing (55 8C, 2.0 min), and extension (72 8C, 2.0 min). The length between the former primers is 140 bp in HPV types 16 and 18, and 141 bp in HPV type 33 for the E6 region. DNA detection was based upon the amplification by PCR, and was confirmed by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. Three kinds of restriction enzymes, Rsa I, Dde I, and Hae III (Takara Shuzo Co. Ltd., Japan), were used as primary screening enzymes in this study. The HPV types were identified by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) [26].
2.4. Western blotting Protein from tissue samples was extracted using T-PERTM tissue protein extraction reagent (PIERCE, Rockford, USA), and then homogenized. Two micrograms of proteins was electrophoresed through 10% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) polyacrylamide gel and transferred to a cellulose membrane. The membranes were blocked with 5% skim milk and immunoreacted with primary mouse anti-human p53 monoclonal antibody (DO-7) (Novocastra, Newcaslte, UK) at 1:1000 dilution for 60 min at room temperature. Breast and colonic carcinomas known to express the immunostaining for p53 protein were used as a positive control. Negative controls were used ovarian carcinomas without p53 overexpression. After washing, the membrane was incubated with anti-mouse IgG. Bound antibodies were detected using the LumiGLO chemiluminescent system (KPL Inc., MD, USA). In this study, western blotting could be performed in only one case, because other samples were very small. 2.5. Statistical analysis Comparison of groups was performed using Fisher’s exact probability test or x2-test. A value of p < 0.05 was considered significant. Recurrence-free survival or overall survival according to p53 overexpression was constructed using Kaplan–Meier method, and the curves were compared using the log-rank test.
3. Results 3.1. Immunohistochemical staining of p53 and clinicopathological parameters Positive staining for p53 overexpression was localized in the nuclei of carcinoma cells (Fig. 1). Twenty of 49 (40.8%) cervical carcinomas demonstrated nuclear staining for p53.
Fig. 1. Immunohistochemical staining for p53 in squamous cell carcinoma. Several nuclei of tumor cells show overexpression (at 200 magnification).
A. Ikuta et al. / Cancer Detection and Prevention 29 (2005) 528–536
Fig. 2. Western blot analysis of cervical carcinoma using DO-7 antibody. Overexpression of p53 protein is observed. A major band at 53 kd can be seen. Lane 1, cervical carcinoma tissue sample; lane 2, positive control.
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In addition, p53 protein expression was observed by Western blot analysis as shown in Fig. 2. While, positive staining of Ki-67 was observed in 40 (81.6%). Association between p53 overexpression and clinicopathological parameters is shown in Table 1. Twenty of 49 (40.8%) cervical carcinomas demonstrated nuclear staining for p53, including 32.4% in stage IA/IB and 66.7% in stage IIA/IIB ( p = 0.03). p53 overexpression was shown in 23.8% of the younger group (<40 years) and 53.6% of the older group (40 years ) ( p = 0.02). Thirty-one patients were premenopausal status, and 18 were postmenopause. p53 overexpression was detected in 29.0% of the premenopausal group and 66.7% of the postmenopausal group ( p = 0.01). The distribution of p53 overexpression according to the risk of recurrence was 31.6% in patients with no recurrence and 72.7% in those with recurrence ( p = 0.01). The recurrence-free survival curves in relation to p53 overexpression are shown in Fig. 3(A). p53 overexpression was found to be a significant for recurrence-free survival by the log-rank survival analysis (x2 = 7.62, p = 0.005). Though there was no significant, the expression of p53 was detected in three of four death patients. There was a significant association between p53 overexpression and age, hormonal status or FIGO stage ( p = 0.02, 0.01, 0.03), as well as a significant association
Table 1 Association between p53 overexpression and clinicopathological parameters Clinicopathological parameters
No. of patients
No.
p53 over expression %
p-Value
Age (years) <40 40
23 28
5 15
23.8 53.6
0.02
Hormonal status Premenopause Postmenopause
31 18
9 12
29.0 66.7
0.01
FIGO stage IA/IB IIA/IIB
37 (8/29) 12 (1/11)
12 (2/10) 8 (1/7)
32.4 66.7
0.03
Histology SCC AC ASC
36 11 2
17 3 0
47.2 27.3 0
0.24
Lymph node metastases No 22 Yes 17 unknown 10
7 9 4
30.4 56.3 36.4
0.18
Parametrium involvement No 32 Yes 17
10 10
31.2 58.8
0.06
Recurrence No Yes
38 11
12 8
31.6 72.7
0.01
Death No Yes
45 4
17 3
37.7 75
0.14
SCC: squamous cell carcinoma; AC: adenocarcinoma; ASC: adenosquamous carcinoma.
Fig. 3. Kaplan–Meier curves for recurrence-free survival (A) or overall survival (B) according to p53 overexpression in patients with cervical carcinoma (log-rank test, A; x2 = 7.62, d.f. = 1 and p = 0.005, B; x2 = 2.56, d.f. = 1 and p = 0.1). When p53 overexpression was observed, survival rate was not significant (B), but recurrence rate increased significantly (A).
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between p53 overexpression and recurrence in the present study ( p = 0.01). The overexpression of p53 in squamous cell carcinoma (47.2%) was higher than that (13%) in either adenocarcinoma or adenosquamous carcinoma. However, the difference was not significant ( p = 0.24). There was no significant association between p53 overexpression and lymph node metastases ( p = 0.18). Although p53 overexpression was associated with a greater frequency of parametrium involvement, this association was not significant ( p = 0.06). The risk of death from cervical carcinoma was increased in patients with p53 overexpression, although the difference was not significant ( p = 0.14). The overall survival curves in relation to p53 overexpression are shown in Fig. 3(B) . Although p53 overexpression is poorer than that of the p53 negative expression, no significant difference was found (x2 = 2.56, p = 0.1). Because the length of follow-up ranged from 21 to 71 months, 5-year survival is not yet available. 3.2. Detection of HPV DNA and clinicopathological parameters Twenty-five of 49 cases were used for detection of HPV DNA by PCR–RFLP. Nineteen of 25 (76%) were HPV Table 2 Association between HPV DNA and clinicopathological parameters Clinicopathological parameters
No. of patients
HPV DNApositive case No.
p-Value %
Age (years) <40 40
6 19
4 15
66.7 78.9
0.54
Hormonal status Premenopause Postmenopause
12 13
6 11
50 84.6
0.07
FIGO stage IA/IB IIA/IIB
15 (1/14) 10 (1/9)
12 (0/12) 7 (0/7)
80 70
0.56
Histology SCC AC ASC
20 5 0
15 4 0
75 80 0
0.81
Lymph node metastases No 9 Yes 13 Unknown 3
6 11 2
66.7 84.6 66.7
0.32
Fig. 4. The electropheretic pattern of untyped HPV (HPV X) by L1 consensus primers. HPV DNA fragments were amplified, but the restriction map did not confirm: 1, uncut; 2, Rsa I; 3, Dde I; 4, HaeIII; positive control, SiHa cell including HPV 16. The molecular markers (øx 174 DNA digested with Hae III) are shown on the left; bp (base pair).
DNA-positive and 6 (24%) were negative in the present study. Sixteen of 19 were detected by PCR–RFLP, and three could be amplified by HPV detection set. HPV DNA was not amplified at all by HPV typing set. The association between HPV DNA-positive cases and clinicopathological parameters is summarized in Table 2. There was no association between HPV-positive cases and age, FIGO stage, histology, lymph node metastases, parametrium involvement, recurrence, and risk of death. Although HPV-positive cases were slight associated with postmenopausal status, this association was not significant ( p = 0.07). 3.3. Relation between p53 overexpression and HPV typing Of the 19 HPV-positive cases, 9 (47.4%) demonstrated HPV type 16, 1 (5.3%) HPV type 18, 2 (10.5%) HPV type 52, and 7 (36.8%) demonstrated unknown types (HPV X) (Fig. 4). There was no association between p53 overexpression and detection or type of HPV DNA, as shown in Table 3. Table 3 Relationship between p53 overexpression and HPV DNA or type of HPV
Parametrium involvement No 11 Yes 14
8 11
72.7 78.6
0.73
Recurrence No Yes
17 8
13 6
76.5 75
0.93
Death No Yes
22 3
16 3
72.7 100
0.30
SCC: squamous cell carcinoma; AC: adenocarcinoma; ASC: adenosquamous carcinoma.
HPV case HPV HPV HPV HPV
p53 overexpression () (n = 11) No. (%)
p53 overexpression (+) (n = 14) No. (%)
p-Value
DNA-positive
8 (72.7)
11 (78.6)
0.73
16 18 52 X
4 (36.4) 1 (9.1) 0 3 (27.3)
5 (35.7) 0 2 (14.3) 4 (28.6)
0.84 0.22 0.2 0.95
X: unclassified HPV types.
A. Ikuta et al. / Cancer Detection and Prevention 29 (2005) 528–536 Table 4 Relationship between recurrence and clinicopathological parameters in patients with cervical carcinoma Clinicopathological parameters
No. of patients
Patients with recurrence
p-Value
No.
%
21 28
3 8
14.2 28.6
0.23
Hormonal status Premenopause Postmonopause
31 18
6 5
19.3 27.8
0.84
FIGO stage IA/IB IIA/IIB
37 (8/29) 12 (1/11)
7 (1/6) 4 (1/3)
18.9 33.3
0.29
Histology SCC AC ASC
36 11 2
8 3 0
22.2 27.3 0
0.24
Lymph node metastases No 22 Yes 17 Unknown 10
2 5 4
9.1 29.4 40
0.07
Parametrium involvement No 32 Yes 17
2 9
6.3 52.9
0.0001
Age (years) <40 40
SCC: squamous cell carcinoma; AC: adenocarcinoma; ASC: adenosquamous carcinoma.
3.4. Relation between recurrence and clinicopathological parameters There was a highly significant association between recurrence and parametrium involvement, as shown in Table 4 ( p = 0.0001). The rate of recurrence was higher in the older group (40 years ) than the younger group (<40 years), though this difference was not significant ( p = 0.23). Recurrence occurred with slightly greater frequency in patients with a more advanced clinical stage. There was no association between recurrence and hormonal status ( p = 0.84) or histology ( p = 0.24). Lymph node metastases
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were associated with a greater frequency of recurrence. However, this difference was not significant ( p = 0.07). In the present study, recurrence was observed in 11 patients (22.4%) and death in four (8.1%). Table 5 summarizes clinicopathological parameters, p53 overexpression, HPV DNA or typing, or disease-free survival in patients with recurrence. The median age at recurrence was 55 years, ranging from 33 to 90 years. Disease-free survival ranged from 5 to 32 months, and the median period was 10 months. In particular, p53 overexpression was observed in 72.7% (8/11).
4. Discussion In uterine cervical carcinoma, clinical stage, lymph node metastases, or parametrium involvement are important prognostic factors [22,23]. p53 plays an important role in regulating DNA repair or apoptosis [2,4,8–10]. With regard to the prognostic significance of p53 overexpression in cervical carcinoma, some published data are controversial [27–35]. Our immunohistochemical study showed that p53 overexpression is associated with age, hormonal status, FIGO stage, or recurrence in patients with uterine cervical carcinoma, similar to the findings of several previous studies [27–29]. p53 overexpression is linked with the control of cell growth, cell cycle, and apoptosis [2,4,8–10]. Wild-type p53 protein usually resides in normal cell nuclei. This protein is unstable and has a half-life of only 20–30 min, while the mutant p53 protein is more stable and has a prolonged halflife, resulting in detectable immunohistochemical staining [8,10,21]. The mutation of the p53 gene is the most common genetic alteration found in many human carcinomas [2,4,8,9,30,36]. Epidemiological studies have shown that HPV infection, especially high-risk HPV including HPV types 16 and 18, is involved in the carcinogenesis of uterine cervical carcinoma [5–7]. It is known that high-risk HPV produces E6 oncoprotein, which binds to wild-type p53 protein to inactivate and degrade tumor suppression [3,9,10,16–20]. It is therefore postulated that loss of p53
Table 5 Clinicopathological parameters, p53 overexpression, HPV DNA, or disease free survival in recurrence cases Age
FIGO
Histology
Lymph node metastases
Parametrium involvement
p53 overexpression
HPV DNA
HPV Typing
Disease-free survival (months)
Prognoses
63 33 34 42 49 55 90 81 48 70 73
IA IB IB IB IB IB IB IIA IIB IIB IIB
SCC AC AC SCC SCC SCC SCC SCC AC SCC SCC
Unknown Unknown + + + Unknown Unknown + + +
+ + + + + + + +
+ + + + + + + +
ND + ND + + ND + + +
ND 16 ND 16 16 ND 52 ND ND X 52
32 16 16 16 18 9 6 5 6 10 10
Survival Survival Survival Survival Death Death Death Survival Survival Survival Death
SCC: squamous cell carcinoma; AC: adenocarcinoma. ND: not done. X: unclassified HPV types.
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function either by binding to HPV coding proteins or by mutations of the p53 gene is an important event in the pathogenesis of cervical carcinomas [2,10,12,20]. The prevalence of p53 mutation varies among tumor types, ranging from 0 to 60% in major carcinomas [2,8– 10,15,30,37,38]. However, several studies have found that the p53 mutation is uncommon in uterine cervical carcinoma [10,36,39]. Immunohistochemistry has demonstrated elevated expression of p53 protein in a variety of human carcinoma, affecting the lung [40], prostate [15], bladder [15], ovary [11,41], endometrium [42–46], and uterine cervix [14,15,19,27–29,31–35,37,39,41–45,47]. Nuclear accumulation of p53 protein can be due to the presence of the mutated form, but stabilization of gene products other than point mutations and alterations in the normal degradation process or genetic alterations in genes other than the p53 gene can induce overexpression of p53 protein [48]. In addition, it is possible that p53 overexpression may be induced by wild-type p53 protein expression [48]. However, immunohistochemical studies have been widely carried out in many histopathological laboratories to screen for the presence of p53 protein, and it has been reported that p53 overexpression is related to progression or prognoses in many carcinomas [14,15,37,41–46]. In uterine cervical carcinoma, the detection rate of p53 overexpression by immunohistochemistry has been reported to range from 8 to 74% [20,27–35,39,47], and some reports have suggested that p53 overexpression is important as a prognostic marker [10,20,27–29,47]. On the other hand, there are few studies failing to demonstrate any prognostic value for p53 overexpression [16,30,31,33–35]. In uterine cervical carcinoma, prognostic factors such as clinical stage, lymph node metastases, or parametrium involvement have been established [22,23]. Our findings demonstrate a significant association between parametrium involvement and recurrence. Although FIGO stage and lymph node metastases showed slight associations with the frequency of recurrence, this difference was not significant. In this study, there was a strong correlation between p53 overexpression and FIGO stage, but there was no association between p53 overexpression and lymph node metastases. Although parametrium involvement is known as one of the most important prognostic factors in uterine cervical carcinoma, there have been very few reports on the association between p53 overexpression and parametrium invasion. Chen et al. [29] have reported that p53 overexpression shows no association with parametrium involvement. However, that study only investigated cervical carcinoma stage IB1. Huang et al. [27] have also demonstrated that p53 overexpression is not associated with parametrium invasion. In our study, p53 overexpression was observed more frequently in patients with parametrium involvement. There are several studies investigating whether HPV infection is associated with progression or prognoses in
uterine cervical carcinoma [49–55]. Though HPV infection does not correlate with clinical stage, the type of HPV DNA is associated with worse prognoses [49]. However, there is no relationship between HPV infection and prognoses [50– 52]. HPV infection shows a greater correlation with clinical features in the early stage compared with the advanced stage [53]. The absence of HPV DNA is associated with poorer prognoses than those in HPV-positive cervical carcinoma [54]. Multiple HPV infections are associated with shorter survival than that in patients with single HPV infection [55]. Our results suggest that the presence of HPV DNA is not correlated with age, clinical stage, or prognosis. However, there is slight association between HPV DNA and menopausal status. Several studies have implicated a relation between HPV infection and p53 status [9,10,18,20,36,56,57]. The existence of an inverse correlation between the presence of HPV DNA and p53 mutation has been reported in uterine cervical carcinoma [9,10,18,20,36,56,57]. In addition, several studies have shown that cervical carcinoma associated with HPV shows a wild-type p53 gene, while that without HPV shows a mutant p53 gene [9,10,18,20,36,56,57]. These results also suggest that the inactivation of p53 by mutation in the absence of HPV is an important step in carcinogenesis [18]. Immunohistochemical study would be expected to demonstrate an absence of p53 staining in HPV-positive cases and positive nuclear staining in HPV-negative cases with a missense mutation [10]. However, an other study has demonstrated that there is no inverse correlation between the degree of p53 immune activity and the ratio of HPV-positive cells [20]. Other studies have revealed no association between p53 overexpression and HPV DNA in cervical carcinoma [33,58], while it has been reported elsewhere that p53 overexpression is associated HPV infection [59]. Our study found no relationship between HPV infection and p53 overexpression, and further investigations with a large number of samples will be necessary to assess this phenomena. In the present study, either high-risk HPV infection or p53 overexpression was detected in 88% of all cases (22/25). Other investigators have reported similar findings [20]. This finding suggests that the inactivation of p53 function by HPV infection or altered p53 protein usually occurs in advance of cervical carcinoma [20]. The results of the present study indicate that p53 overexpression is more frequent in older than in younger patients, suggesting that there are some specific genetic events influencing p53 overexpression in older patients. Although it has previously been reported that HPV positivity is related to patient age [48,60], there was no association observed between HPV DNA and age in the present study. In conclusion, though the observation period was brief in the present study, investigating p53 overexpression by immunohistochemical study may be useful in identifying cases at risk for recurrence in uterine cervical carcinoma. We
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examined a small number of cases in the present study, and other studies should be performed with a more population and a long-term follow-up to elucidate p53 overexpression by immunohistochemical study as a prognostic factor for uterine cervical carcinoma.
[18]
[19] [20]
Acknowledgements [21]
The authors would like to thank Drs. Maki Tanaka and Yoshiaki Tanaka (Department of gynecology, TerakataIkuno Hospital, Osaka, Japan) for their advice. Secretarial assistance from Ms. Ayuko Asaoka, Ms. Wakako Okamoto, Ms. Miyuki Imai, and Ms. Noriko Sugie is also greatly appreciated.
[22]
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