Korean J Pathol.
2000 Dec;34(12):1009-1015.
Cyclin D1 Protein Expression is Inversely Correlated with p53 Protein in Primary and Recurrent Transitional Cell Carcinoma of the Urinary Bladder
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Pathology, College of Medicine, Ewha Womans University, Seoul 158-050, Korea.
Abstract
-
Transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder is the most common cancer of
the urinary tract and is characterized by frequent recurrence. Like the other malignant
tumor, the genetic alterations leading to neoplastic transformation of the urothelium are
related with the activation of oncogenes and loss of functional tumor suppressor genes.
Cyclin D1 is a putative protooncogene as cell cycle regulator essential for G1 phase
progression and is frequently overexpressed in several human tumor. In this study we
performed immunohistochemical stainings of cyclin D1 and p53 in both primary and
recurrent transitional cell carcinomas of urinary bladder from 56 patients including 20
cases of recurrent tumor, and compared their results with histopathologic features. The
results
were as follows. Cyclin D1 immunoreactivity was found in 10 of 10 cases
(100%) of grade 1, 25 of 41 (61%) cases of grade 2, and 11 of 25 (44%) cases of grade
3 transitional cell carcinomas. p53 immunoreactivity was found in 40% of grade 1, 63%
of grade 2, and 87% of grade 3 lesions. Cyclin D1 expression was significantly higher in
Ta and T1 lesions than T2 to T4 by pathologic tumor stage. Conversely p53
immunoreactivity was increased in proportion to the T classification. Cyclin D1 was de
creased in recurrent transitional cell carcinomas, compared with primary transitional cell
carcinomas. However, there was no statistical significance. In conclusion, cyclin D1
immunoreactivity is associated with low histologic grade and low tumor stage. And
there is inverse relationship between the cyclin D1 and p53 overexpression.