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Tumor Spreading to the Contralateral Ovary in Bilateral Ovarian Carcinoma Is a Late Event in Clonal Evolution

Cancer of the ovary is bilateral in 25%. Cytogenetic analysis could determine whether the disease in bilateral cases is metastatic or two separately occurring primary tumors, but karyotypic information comparing the two cancerous ovaries is limited to a single report with 11 informative cases. We pr...

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Autores principales: Micci, Francesca, Haugom, Lisbeth, Ahlquist, Terje, Abeler, Vera M., Trope, Claes G., Lothe, Ragnhild A., Heim, Sverre
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2744120/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19759843
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2010/646340
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author Micci, Francesca
Haugom, Lisbeth
Ahlquist, Terje
Abeler, Vera M.
Trope, Claes G.
Lothe, Ragnhild A.
Heim, Sverre
author_facet Micci, Francesca
Haugom, Lisbeth
Ahlquist, Terje
Abeler, Vera M.
Trope, Claes G.
Lothe, Ragnhild A.
Heim, Sverre
author_sort Micci, Francesca
collection PubMed
description Cancer of the ovary is bilateral in 25%. Cytogenetic analysis could determine whether the disease in bilateral cases is metastatic or two separately occurring primary tumors, but karyotypic information comparing the two cancerous ovaries is limited to a single report with 11 informative cases. We present a series of 32 bilateral ovarian carcinoma cases, analyzed by karyotyping and high-resolution CGH. Our karyotypic findings showed that spreading to the contralateral ovary had occurred in bilateral ovarian cancer cases and that it was a late event in the clonal evolution of the tumors. This was confirmed by the large number of similar changes detected by HR-CGH in the different lesions from the same patient. The chromosomal bands most frequently involved in structural rearrangements were 19p13 (n = 12) and 19q13 (n = 11). The chromosomal bands most frequently gained by both tumorous ovaries were 5p14 (70%), 8q23-24 (65%), 1q23-24 (57%), and 12p12 (48%), whereas the most frequently lost bands were 17p11 (78%), 17p13 (74%), 17p12 (70%), 22q13 (61%), 8p21 and 19q13 (52%), and 8p22-23 (48%). This is the first time that 5p14 is seen gained at such a high frequency in cancer of the ovary; possibly oncogene(s) involved in bilateral ovarian carcinogenesis or tumor progression may reside in this band.
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spelling pubmed-27441202009-09-16 Tumor Spreading to the Contralateral Ovary in Bilateral Ovarian Carcinoma Is a Late Event in Clonal Evolution Micci, Francesca Haugom, Lisbeth Ahlquist, Terje Abeler, Vera M. Trope, Claes G. Lothe, Ragnhild A. Heim, Sverre J Oncol Research Article Cancer of the ovary is bilateral in 25%. Cytogenetic analysis could determine whether the disease in bilateral cases is metastatic or two separately occurring primary tumors, but karyotypic information comparing the two cancerous ovaries is limited to a single report with 11 informative cases. We present a series of 32 bilateral ovarian carcinoma cases, analyzed by karyotyping and high-resolution CGH. Our karyotypic findings showed that spreading to the contralateral ovary had occurred in bilateral ovarian cancer cases and that it was a late event in the clonal evolution of the tumors. This was confirmed by the large number of similar changes detected by HR-CGH in the different lesions from the same patient. The chromosomal bands most frequently involved in structural rearrangements were 19p13 (n = 12) and 19q13 (n = 11). The chromosomal bands most frequently gained by both tumorous ovaries were 5p14 (70%), 8q23-24 (65%), 1q23-24 (57%), and 12p12 (48%), whereas the most frequently lost bands were 17p11 (78%), 17p13 (74%), 17p12 (70%), 22q13 (61%), 8p21 and 19q13 (52%), and 8p22-23 (48%). This is the first time that 5p14 is seen gained at such a high frequency in cancer of the ovary; possibly oncogene(s) involved in bilateral ovarian carcinogenesis or tumor progression may reside in this band. Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2010 2009-09-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2744120/ /pubmed/19759843 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2010/646340 Text en Copyright © 2010 Francesca Micci et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Micci, Francesca
Haugom, Lisbeth
Ahlquist, Terje
Abeler, Vera M.
Trope, Claes G.
Lothe, Ragnhild A.
Heim, Sverre
Tumor Spreading to the Contralateral Ovary in Bilateral Ovarian Carcinoma Is a Late Event in Clonal Evolution
title Tumor Spreading to the Contralateral Ovary in Bilateral Ovarian Carcinoma Is a Late Event in Clonal Evolution
title_full Tumor Spreading to the Contralateral Ovary in Bilateral Ovarian Carcinoma Is a Late Event in Clonal Evolution
title_fullStr Tumor Spreading to the Contralateral Ovary in Bilateral Ovarian Carcinoma Is a Late Event in Clonal Evolution
title_full_unstemmed Tumor Spreading to the Contralateral Ovary in Bilateral Ovarian Carcinoma Is a Late Event in Clonal Evolution
title_short Tumor Spreading to the Contralateral Ovary in Bilateral Ovarian Carcinoma Is a Late Event in Clonal Evolution
title_sort tumor spreading to the contralateral ovary in bilateral ovarian carcinoma is a late event in clonal evolution
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2744120/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19759843
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2010/646340
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