Diagnostic Implications Of L1, P16, And Ki-67 Proteins And Hpv Dna In Low-Grade Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GYNECOLOGICAL PATHOLOGY(2011)

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Abstract
The expressions of p16, Ki-67, and L1 proteins and human papillomavirus DNA were investigated using polymerase chain reaction (HPV/PCR) and catalyzed signal-amplified colorimetric DNA in situ hybridization (CSAC/ISH) as potential molecular markers for the diagnosis and transforming potential of low cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN1). Ki-67 and p16 protein expression increased linearly from control cases to more dysplastic cases (CIN1, CIN2, and CIN3), peaking in squamous cell carcinoma cases (P<0.05). In contrast, L1 expression was inversely correlated with malignant transformation. Patients with CIN1 were divided into 4 groups: L1(-)p16(+), L1(+)p16(-), L1(-)p16(-), and L1(+)p16(+), and the immunohistochemical results were combined with HPV/PCR, L1/PCR, and high-risk E6/E7 genome and CSAC/ISH data. Malignant transformation correlated with L1(-)p16(+) patients (100% of CIN2, CIN3, and squamous cell carcinoma cases) and was evident in approximately 23% of CIN1 cases. In addition, the presence of HPV/DNA(+) was evident in 52% of CIN1 cases, and within the L1(-)p16(+) group. In 4 of 7 cases, the high-risk E6/E7 HPV genome was present and in 1 case it was integrated into the host DNA, as confirmed using CSAC/ISH. In patients with CIN1, investigating the presence of HPV/DNA using PCR and the presence of the high-risk E6/E7 genome is necessary to distinguish high-risk oncogenic patient groups from low-risk groups. This study highlights the importance of combining immunohistochemical analysis with HPV/PCR and CSAC/ISH to identify patients with CIN1 with a risk of neoplastic progression.
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Key words
Cervix, CIN1, HPV DNA, L1, p16
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