Absence of epidermal growth factor receptor expression in squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix is an indicator of limited tumor disease.
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- Published online on: January 1, 1999 https://doi.org/10.3892/or.6.1.205
- Pages: 205-214
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Abstract
The expression of growth factors is considered as an important diagnostic and prognostic feature in tumor pathology. We investigated the value of the immunohistochemical EGF-receptor expression (EGF-R) in 30 squamous cell carcinomas of the uterine cervix, treated by radical hysterectomy and lymphadenectomy according to the Wertheim-Meigs-Okabayashi technique. Immunohistochemical reactions were performed on 4 microm sections from paraffin-embedded tissue, using an indirect peroxidase method. The staining results were evaluated semiquantitatively as negative (n=9; 30%) or as slightly, moderately or severely positive (n=21; 70%). The EGF-R-negative tumors were found in less advanced tumor stages. None had invaded into the parametrium (100%), eight were staged as T1 (89%), seven as N0 (78%), and seven showed no evidence for lymphangiosis carcinomatosa (78%). The respective values for the EGF-R-positive tumors ranged from 52% to 67%. However, only the difference in parametral invasion (EGF-R-negative: 0%, EGF-R-positive: 38%) was statistically significant (p=0.0306), probably due to the small number of cases. The EGF-R-expression was not correlated to histomorphological tumor grading. The results of this study indicate an inverse correlation between EGF-R expression and tumor spread. Assuming that this trend could be confirmed by a larger group of patients, immunostaining for EGF-R in a tumor biopsy could be useful to adapt surgical strategies and adjuvant therapy in the individual patient. Moreover, the EGF-R is an interesting target for immunotherapeutic approaches in squamous cell cervical carcinoma.