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). |