4.4 Article

p53, ER, and Ki67 Expression in Canine Mammary Carcinomas and Correlation With Pathological Variables and Prognosis

Journal

VETERINARY PATHOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 2, Pages 325-331

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0300985820973462

Keywords

canine; canine mammary tumor (CMT); carcinoma; estrogen receptor (ER); immunohistochemistry; Ki67; p53

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The study found that p53 accumulated in a small subset of canine mammary tumors and was associated with higher proliferative activity and higher histological grade, while ER expression served as a differentiation marker associated with more favorable prognosis and biological behavior. The combined use of these 3 markers may help predict the biological behavior of canine mammary carcinomas.
Using immunohistochemistry, 170 canine mammary carcinomas were evaluated for p53, ER (estrogen receptor), and Ki67. Of the 170 tumors, 89 were grade I (52.3%), 36 were grade II (21.2%), and 45 were grade III (26.4%). Eight cases (0.5%) were positive for p53 and 69/170 cases (40.5%) were positive for ER. Ki67 values were 24 +/- 18% (mean +/- SD). Using a cutoff value of 33.3% Ki67-positive neoplastic nuclei, 38/159 (23.8%) were classified as high proliferative and 121/159 (76.2%) as low proliferative. p53-positive cases had significantly higher Ki67 expression and higher histological grade. ER expression was not correlated with p53 expression but was significantly related to low Ki67 values and low histological grade. Moreover, ER-positive cases had significantly longer survival compared to ER-negative tumors, and ER expression had better correlation with tumor-related survival than histological grade. In summary, p53 accumulated in a small subset of canine mammary tumors and was associated with higher proliferative activity and higher histological grade. ER expression was confirmed as a differentiation marker associated with more favorable prognosis and biological behavior. The combined use of these 3 markers could be used in addition to histological grade to predict the biological behavior of canine mammary carcinomas.

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