Skip to Main Content (Press Enter)

Logo UNIBS
  • ×
  • Home
  • People
  • Organizations
  • Expertise & Skills
  • Outputs
  • Jobs
  • Degrees
  • Courses
  • Third Mission

Expertise & Skills
Logo UNIBS

|

Expertise & Skills

unibs.it
  • ×
  • Home
  • People
  • Organizations
  • Expertise & Skills
  • Outputs
  • Jobs
  • Degrees
  • Courses
  • Third Mission
  1. Outputs

Human papillomavirus infection and immunohistochemical p16(INK4a) expression as predictors of outcome in penile squamous cell carcinomas

Academic Article
Publication Date:
2015
Abstract:
Approximately 50% of penile squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) are associated with high-risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV) infection. We evaluated the correlation of p16(INK4a) expression and HR-HPV with clinicopathological features and outcome in a cohort of patients with penile SCC. Two tissue microarrays were constructed from 53 invasive penile SCC at our hospital. p16(INK4a) expression was assessed by immunohistochemistry (CINtec Kit). High-risk human papillomavirus status was assessed by in situ hybridization (INFORM HPV III family 16 probe B cocktail). High-risk human papillomavirus was detected in 8 cases (15%), and p16(INK4a) overexpression was found in 23 cases (44%). Both markers showed a significant association with histologic subtype (P = .017 and P = .01, respectively) and lymphovascular invasion (P = .015 and P = .015, respectively). Regarding outcome analyses, neither HPV infection nor p16(INK4a) overexpression significantly predicted overall survival or cancer-specific survival using Cox proportional hazards regression model. High-risk human papillomavirus positivity and p16(INK4a) overexpression were significantly associated with histologic subtype and presence of lymphovascular invasion. Human papillomavirus status was not predictive of outcome in our cohort. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
CRIS type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Bezerra Stephania, M; Chaux, Alcides; Ball Mark, W; Faraj Sheila, F; Munari, E; Gonzalez-Roibon, Nilda; Sharma, Rajni; Bivalacqua Trinity, J; Burnett Arthur, L; Netto George, J
Handle:
https://iris.unibs.it/handle/11379/532970
Published in:
HUMAN PATHOLOGY
Journal
  • Support
  • Privacy
  • Use of cookies
  • Legal notes

Powered by VIVO | Designed by Cineca | 26.5.2.0