CLASSICAL OSTEOBLASTOMA, ATYPICAL OSTEOBLASTOMA, AND OSTEOSARCOMA. A COMPARATIVE STUDY BASED ON CLINICAL, HISTOLOGICAL, AND BIOLOGICAL PARAMETERS
2007; Elsevier BV; Volume: 62; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1590/s1807-59322007000200012
ISSN1980-5322
AutoresCláudia Regina Gomes Cardim Mendes de Oliveira, Berenice B. Mendonça, Olavo Pires de Camargo, Emília M. Pinto, Sérgio Antonio Barbosa do Nascimento, Maria do Rosario D. O. Latorre, Maria Cláudia Nogueira Zerbini,
Tópico(s)Cancer-related Molecular Pathways
ResumoOBJECTIVE: To investigate the biological behavior of classical and atypical osteoblastomas in comparison to osteosarcomas. METHODS: Based on histological parameters, 30 osteoblastomas were subclassified as classical osteoblastomas (23/30) or atypical osteoblastoma (high cellularity, prominent blue osteoid, and epithelioid osteoblasts-7/30). Comparative immunohistochemical and clinical analysis was performed in 17 cases of patients with high-grade osteosarcoma. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded archival tissue was immunostained for p53 and proliferation cell nuclear antigen. Tumors with positive p53 stain underwent molecular analyses for fragments of exon 10. RESULTS: The mean proliferating cell nuclear antigen indexes for classical osteoblastoma, atypical osteoblastoma, and osteosarcoma were 33%, 61%, and 79%, respectively. The atypical subgroup showed similar results to those of the osteosarcoma group (P < 0.001). p53 protein was detected in 4 (13%) osteoblastomas (3 of these were atypical osteoblastoma), and 4 osteosarcomas (23%) also showed p53 positivity. DNA mutation performed in p53-positive cases was confirmed in exon 10 in 2 atypical osteoblastomas (2/3), 1 classical osteoblastoma (1/1), and 1 osteosarcoma (1/4). Disease recurrence was correlated with p53 expression (P = 0.009), atypical subtype (P = 0.031), spiculated blue bone on histology (P = 0.018), and proliferatingcell nuclear antigen labeling index > 40 (P = 0.015). CONCLUSION: These results validate atypical osteoblastoma as an entity, with p53 and proliferation cell nuclear antigen immunoexpression closer to that of osteosarcoma than of classical osteoblastoma. Proliferating cell nuclear antigen labeling index and p53 may be useful predictors of recurrence.
Referência(s)