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                    Histopathology Image of

          Juvenile Polyp of the Large Intestine 1

                                 

 

Morphological features of juvenile colon polyps in children.Arkh Patol. 2004 Jan-Feb;66 (1):28-31.

Histological, histochemical and immunohistochemical studies of 50 solitary juvenile polyps (JP) and 50 JP from children with juvenile polyposis syndrome (JPS) were performed. Observations of the focal complex glandular structures with high mitotic rate were more frequent in JP from patients with JPS (n = 29, 58%) than in solitary JP (n = 17, 34%) (p < 0.03). The immunohistochemical study demonstrated p53 overexpression in individual cells and more than 50% of Ki-67-positive cells in 5 (10%) solitary JP and in 17(34%) JP from patients with JPS (p < 0.007). The finding of microglandular pattern is more typical for JP from patients with JPS. Pathological data, expression of p53 and Ki-67 by immunohistochemistry could help to pick out the group of JP with dysplastic changes.

Juvenile polyposis coli: a facultative precancerosis with some similarities to ulcerative colitis? Pathol Res Pract. 2005;201(7):517-20.

We investigated the case of a 13-year-old male with juvenile polyposis (JP) to determine the extent of intraepithelial neoplasia and associated genetic changes, as well as cellular proliferation, within these polyps using immunohistochemistry with antibodies against p53, bcl-2, and Ki-67. Examination of the total proctocolectomy specimen revealed 70 polyps. The 18 largest polyps were investigated microscopically and disclosed the typical hamartomas with frequent erosions of the surface epithelium and reparative changes. Only one polyp showed focal low-grade intraepithelial neoplasia. The immunohistochemical studies revealed an expression of p53 and an abnormal Ki-67 pattern of the surface epithelium only within the neoplastic area. These findings may hint at a possible pathogenetic mechanism for the evolution of colorectal cancer in JP. As in ulcerative colitis, carcinomas in JP may develop along a dysplasia-carcinoma sequence resulting from permanent mechanical insults, inflammation, and repair rather than from an adenoma-carcinoma sequence as in familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP).

Pathology of the Intestinal Polyp (Juvenile Polyp)

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Genetic alterations and epithelial dysplasia in juvenile polyposis syndrome and sporadic juvenile polyps.Am J Pathol. 1997 Mar;150(3):939-47.

Juvenile polyps are regarded as hamartomatous polyps and occur in sporadic and familial syndromic settings. There is increased risk of gastrointestinal neoplasia in patients with juvenile polyposis syndrome, but the molecular mechanisms are not known. We therefore studied 78 colorectal juvenile polyposis from 12 patients with juvenile polyps syndrome and 34 sporadic juvenile polyps for epithelial dysplasia and genetic changes associated with colorectal neoplasia. Dysplasia occurred in 31% of syndromic juvenile polyps but not in sporadic juvenile polyps (P < 0.0001). Topographic control of proliferation and expression of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(WAFI/CIP1) seen in native colorectal epithelium was lost in 79% of dysplastic juvenile polyps and in 8% of nondysplastic juvenile polyps (P < 0.000001). Somatic mutations in the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene were demonstrated in 50% of dysplastic juvenile polyps (3 of 6) but not in any of 16 juvenile polyps without dysplasia (P = 0.01). Both sporadic and syndromic juvenile polyps had K-ras mutations (14%) and there was no relationship to dysplasia. p53 gene product overexpression identified by immunohistochemical staining occurred rarely in dysplastic juvenile polyps (2 of 24, 8%). Our results indicate that the multiple genetic alterations involved in usual colorectal neoplasia also play a role in neoplastic transformation of juvenile polyps, predominantly in juvenile polyposis syndrome.

 
July 2009 
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