Cases reported "Urogenital Neoplasms"

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1/3. Triple cancers in the urogenital area of a patient with aplastic anemia.

    Three epithelial neoplastic lesions, perineal Bowenoid papulosis, uterine cervical carcinoma, and bladder transitional cell carcinoma, which occurred in a mildly immunosuppressed patient who had aplastic anemia were studied for human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. In the Bowenoid papulosis, HPV type 16 DNA was identified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and by in situ hybridization (ISH). In contrast, in the uterine cervical carcinoma, HPV 16 was not detected, although possibly another unidentified type of HPV in the lesion was suggested by the ISH findings. In the bladder transitional cell carcinoma, neither papillomavirus genus-specific (PGS) antigen nor HPV DNA was found.
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ranking = 1
keywords = hybridization
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2/3. Isolation of a human papillomavirus from a patient with epidermodysplasia verruciformis: presence of related viral DNA genomes in human urogenital tumors.

    The DNA genome of a human papillomavirus (HPV), tentatively designated HPV-EV, was molecularly cloned from hand to leg lesions of a patient with epidermodysplasia verruciformis, a chronic skin disease associated with a 30% risk of developing cancer. Using stringent hybridization conditions, we observed less than 5% homology between HPV-EV and the cloned genomes of HPV-1, HPV-4, HPV-5, and HPV-5a. HPV-EV DNA showed approximately 6% homology with HPV-2 and 36% homology with HPV-3. These data suggest that HPV-EV is partially related to HPV-3. Using 32P-labeled cloned HPV-EV as probe in Southern blot hybridization experiments, we detected HPV-EV-related DNA in the carcinoma in situ (Bowenoid lesion) of the vulva of the patient from which HPV-EV was isolated. HPV-EV-related DNA was detected in 2 of 10 vulva carcinomas and in 2 of 31 cervical carcinomas. Related DNA sequences were found in papillomas from each of two patients with condyloma acuminata (anogenital warts), which is of interest considering that condylomas have been reported to convert occasionally to carcinomas. The positive vulva DNAs were also probed with other cloned HPV DNAs: HPV-1, HPV-4, and HPV-5a-related sequences were not detected; HPV-3 and HPV-2 dna probes detected strong and weak DNA bands, respectively, of the same size as found with HPV-EV. The HPV DNA sequences were present in the positive tumors mainly as free viral DNA molecules; no evidence for integration into cellular DNA was found. The emerging biological picture with papillomaviruses is that cells transformed by these viruses are maintained in a transformed state by free episomal genomes. Thus, our findings are consistent with the idea, but by no means establish, that HPVs play a role in human cancer by a similar mechanism.
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ranking = 2
keywords = hybridization
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3/3. in situ hybridization analysis of the y chromosome in gonadoblastoma.

    gonadoblastoma is a rare tumor arising in the streak gonads of about 30% of 46,XY sex-reversed females. Because gonadoblastoma develops only in patients who have Y-chromosome material and dysgenetic gonads, it has been hypothesized that positive expression of a gene (or genes) on the y chromosome (GBY) is involved in the etiology of the tumor. To examine the y chromosome directly in tumors, we performed nonisotopic in situ hybridization of a biotin-labeled Y-specific probe for the DYZI locus on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections of tumor samples from four different patients. After hybridization to DYZI, the y chromosome was found to be present in all gonadoblastoma foci in the four patients studied, and the gonadoblastoma foci showed an average of 85% cell nuclei positive for the y chromosome on tissue sections. Normal male and female control tissues showed an average of 78% and 0% positive nuclei, respectively. One patient with bilateral gonadoblastoma had previously been shown to be mosaic, with a 45,X/46,XY karyotype in lymphocytes, skin fibroblasts, and cultures from both gonads. Examination of sections of this patient's gonads showed 79% positive nuclei within the gonadoblastoma foci, whereas the nontumor stromal tissue had 19% positive nuclei. These results indicate that, in this mosaic gonad, tumor foci developed only from cells that had a y chromosome. Our results support the hypothesis that there is a GBY locus on the y chromosome and that the y chromosome is retained in the gonadoblastoma foci during the development of the tumor.
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ranking = 6
keywords = hybridization
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