Annexin A1 (ANXA1) protein expression was evaluated by Western blot in a series of 32 head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs) in a search for molecular alterations that could serve as useful diagnostic/prognostic markers. ANXA1 down-regulation was observed in 24 cases (75%) compared with patient-matched normal epithelium. In relation to clinicopathological variables, ANXA1 down-regulation was significantly associated with advanced T stages (P = 0.029), locoregional lymph node metastases (P = 0.038), advanced disease stage (P = 0.006), hypopharyngeal localization (P = 0.038), and poor histological differentiation (P = 0.005). ANXA1 expression was also analyzed by immunohistochemistry in paraffin-embedded sections from 22 of 32 HNSCCs and 8 premalignant lesions. All dysplastic tissues showed significantly reduced ANXA1 expression compared to a strong positive signal observed in adjacent normal epithelia (except basal and suprabasal cells). A close association was observed between ANXA1 expression and the histological grade in HNSCC. Well-differentiated tumors presented a positive ANXA1 signal in highly keratinized areas whereas moderately and poorly differentiated tumors exhibited very weak or negative staining. Our findings clearly identify ANXA1 as an effective differentiation marker for the histopathological grading of HNSCCs and for the detection of epithelial dysplasia.
Background. Aberrations of the p53 gene and overexpression of its protein are widely recognized markers of malignancy including oral squamous cell carcinomas. This study was performed to evaluate the relationship of immunoexpression of p53 protein in series of 91 squamous cell carcinomas of the oral cavity with clinicopathologic parameters and to investigate whether p53 immunoexpression might influence the clinical outcome of the disease.Methods. From a group of 287 consecutive patients, 91 surgically treated ones were randomly selected. P53 protein expression was investigated by means of immunohistochemistry. Clinical and histopathologic data were gathered, and the patient survival was analyzed.Results. Of the oral carcinomas, 52.7% (n = 48) overexpressed p53, using a threshold of 10% stained cell nuclei. There was a negative correlation of p53 immunoexpression with a histologic grade of differentiation (r = À0.236, p = .06) but not with clinical variables. Overall survival rate was 59% at 5 years. In univariate analysis, tumor size, node status, and advanced clinical stage were significantly associated with shortened overall survival. In patients without neck node metastases, p53 showed a strong correlation with survival (p = .01). In multivariate analysis performed only on N0 patients, tumor extension and p53 immunoexpression were found to be the only independent prognostic parameters with relative risks of 1.9 and 4.3, respectively.Conclusions. A strong relationship was observed between p53 immunoexpression and poor prognosis in patients with oral squamous cell carcinomas without neck node metastases.
Fifteen cases of chondroid syringoma have been studied histologically and by immunohistochemical methods in an attempt to establish their phenotypic profile and to elucidate their histogenesis. The epithelial elements were classified as tubuloglandular, solid nests and stromal cells. The inner cell layers of tubuloglandular components had distinct epithelial features, expressing cytokeratin, carcino-embryonic antigen and epithelial membrane antigen. The outer cell layers expressed vimentin, S-100 protein, neuron-specific enolase and muscle-specific actin and were negative for epithelial markers. The immunophenotypes of stromal cells and solid nests were similar to those of the outer cell layers. These data suggest that the stromal components may derive from the outer cell of tubuloglandular elements and that myo-epithelial cells have an important role in the histogenesis of these lesions and in their mesenchymal matrix production.
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