In addition, patients with high Ki-67 expression had a worse clinical outcome, including poor tumor differentiation (P=0.001), increased positive lymph node metastasis (P=0.006) and increased worst pattern of invasion type (P<0.0001).
When adjusting for confounders with logistic regression, several significant associations were evident including adenoma size with male sex and p53 reactivity; cavernous sinus invasion with size and elevated MIB-1 proliferation index; suprasellar/subfrontal extension with p53 reactivity; and infrasellar invasion with adenoma size alone.
The univariate analysis revealed that survival in these patients is associated with tumor size (P=.028), histological variety (P<.0001), growth pattern (P<.0001), grade (P<.0001), pT (P=.01), vascular invasion (P=.025), necrosis (P=.004) and overexpression of p53 (P=.0006), PECAM-1 (P=.0036) and MIB-1 (P=.0038).
Despite the aggressive features of massive size and cavernous sinus invasion, mitotic rates and immunohistochemistry (IHC) labeling for p53 and MIB-1, features alleged to be associated with atypical adenomas, were minimally increased.
Immunohistochemical analysis of human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) tissues showed that RecQL1 expression is strongly correlated with histological grade and MIB-1 indices of HCC, and that the expression was greater in simple HCCs inducing extranodular growth or portal vein invasion than in HCCs not inducing extranodular growth or portal vein invasion.
Other aggressive findings included high mitotic index (32%), high MIB-1 LI (37%), aggressive variant histology (e.g. papillary, clear cell) (25%), brain invasion (17%), recurrence (39%), and patient death (17%).
In fact, despite features suggestive of a progression of the cancer (such as the increase of both tumour grading and proliferating capacity (MIB-1), and a fall in the reparative process (appearance of mutated p53, reduced expression of both bcl-2 and c-erb-2) being detected, neither local invasion nor metastatic lesions were clinically observed.
Primary archival tumor tissues of 89 patients with clinical stage I nonseminomatous germ cell tumors were analyzed for MIB-1 expression and histological parameters such as percentage embryonal carcinoma and presence of vascular invasion to determine the value of these parameters to predict absence or presence of occult lymph node disease.