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Companied P16 genetic and protein status together providing useful information on the clinical outcome of urinary bladder cancer

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2018

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Wolters Kluwer Health
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Pu, X., L. Zhu, Y. Fu, Z. Fan, J. Zheng, B. Zhang, J. Yang, et al. 2018. “Companied P16 genetic and protein status together providing useful information on the clinical outcome of urinary bladder cancer.” Medicine 97 (15): e0353. doi:10.1097/MD.0000000000010353. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000010353.

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Abstract

Abstract SPEC P16/CEN3/7/17 Probe fluorescence-in-situ-hybridization (FISH) has become the most sensitive method in indentifying the urothelial tumors and loss of P16 has often been identified in low-grade urothelial lesions; however, little is known about the significations of other P16 genetic status (normal and amplification) in bladder cancer. We detected P16 gene status by FISH in 259 urine samples and divided these samples into 3 groups: 1, normal P16; 2, loss of P16; and 3, amplified P16. Meanwhile, p16INK4a protein expression was measured by immunocytochemistry and we characterized the clinicopathologic features of cases with P16 gene status. Loss of P16 occurred in 26.2%, P16 amplification occurred in 41.3% and P16 gene normal occurred in 32.4% of all cases. P16 genetic status was significantly associated with tumor grade and primary tumor status (P = .008 and .017), but not with pathological tumor stage, overall survival, and p16 protein expression. However, P16 gene amplification accompanied protein high-expression has shorter overall survival compared with the overall patients (P = .023), and P16 gene loss accompanied loss of protein also had the tendency to predict bad prognosis (P = .067). Studies show that the genetic status of P16 has a close relation with the stages of bladder cancer. Loss of P16 is associated with low-grade urothelial malignancy while amplified P16 donotes high-grade. Neither P16 gene status nor p16INK4a protein expression alone is an independent predictor of urothelial bladder carcinoma, but combine gene and protein status together providing useful information on the clinical outcome of these patients.

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Diagnostic Accuracy Study, FISH, immunocytotochemistry, P16 genetic status, p16, urinary bladder cancer

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