In all, 10 385 vessels were measured, of which 9873 were from specimens from patients who were alive 5 years after treatment (n=32, group I) and 512 were from patients who died of disease (n=2, group II). The following results were found in group II versus group I: mean vessel size 469 microm vs 272 microm (p=0.024); vessel irregularity 28.3 microm vs 22.3 microm (p<0.001); CD34 staining intensity 0.555 microm vs 0.584 microm (p=0.024).
Automated image analysis of cell populations allowed the identification of populations of malignant cells and provided information on the severity of preneoplastic and neoplastic conditions of use in studies of tumor behavior and with potential clinical application.
The staining intensity of CD34 positive vessels in MEC was higher than in AdCC. In MEC, higher staining intensity of vessels in high-grade tumors and lower vessel density in all MEC patients, predicted poor survival.
Intratracheal instillations of 7H-dibenzo(c, g)carbazole (DBC), a tobacco smoke component, into Syrian golden hamsters, resulted in preneoplastic lesions and benign and malignant respiratory neoplasms. Neoplastic progression was associated with specific changes in the extracellular matrix (ECM), dependent on the stage of tumor development. DBC-induced tracheobronchial squamous metaplasia was associated with an increase in collagen type I and type III deposition in the subepithelial ECM, as observed by computer-assisted image analysis of immunohistochemical staining for the aminoterminal propeptides of collagen type I (PINP) and collagen type III (PIIINP). Increased collagen matrix synthesis was detected in dysplasia by in situ hybridization of alpha1(I) mRNA for collagen I and alpha1(III) mRNA for collagen type III after continued exposure to DBC. In well-differentiated squamous cell carcinomas with an expansive growth pattern, collagen deposition increased, as did fiber size. In moderately differentiated neoplasms, basement membrane (BM) destruction and invasion was associated with a destructive growth pattern and decreases in collagen synthesis and the deposition of new collagen. Preserved deposition of mature collagen was detected by staining for the telopeptide of collagen type I propeptide. In less differentiated tumors, ECM development was minimal, with few and small fibers, possibly explaining the rapid development of these neoplasms. Transforming growth factor beta (TGFbeta1) immunoreactivity was increased in hyperplastic epithelium and well differentiated neoplasms and decreased in dysplasia and less differentiated squamous cell carcinomas, while TGFbeta2 and TGFbeta3 expression was also distinct in neoplastic cells. Collagen synthesis and epithelial differentiation were associated with an increased number of myofibroblasts in the ECM and with increased TGFbeta3 immunoreactivity in differentiated cells and in the matrix. The nature of the composition of the ECM was related to neoplastic growth and progression when analyzed by computer-associated image analysis, revealing alterations in collagen structure, size, and shape.
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