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1.
BMC Vet Res ; 9: 83, 2013 Apr 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23601191

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The antibody Ki-67 is a reliable and easy tool to accurately assess the growth fraction of neoplasms in humans and animals, and it has been used to predict the clinical outcome. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to investigate the immunohistochemical expression pattern of Ki-67 in normal and neoplastic perianal glands of dogs to evaluate the possible use of this proliferation marker as an ancillary method of perianal tumor diagnosis. We studied 42 cases of perianal gland neoplasms including adenomas (n = 15), epitheliomas (n = 15), and carcinomas (n = 12). As controls, 13 tissue samples from normal perianal glands were used. A Ki-67 index was established by a computer-assisted image analysis and compared with manual counting. RESULTS: Out of the 42 cases of perianal gland neoplasms, 34 were from males and eight from females. Recurrence was reported in 14 cases, being higher (8/12) in carcinomas. Immunostaining for Ki-67 revealed that the carcinomas showed a higher proliferation rate (9.87%) compared to groups of epitheliomas (2.66%) and adenomas (0.36%). For adenomas and epitheliomas of the perianal glands the computer-assisted counting and the manual counting gave similar results; however, only the computer-assisted image analysis was efficient to predict the perianal gland carcinoma recurrence. CONCLUSION: Since there were significant differences in the number of Ki-67-positive nuclei, this marker proved to be effective in helping the classification of perianal gland neoplasms and to refine the diagnosis criteria, especially in those samples with high variation in morphology/area. Also, higher Ki-67 index is related to recurrence in cases of perianal gland carcinomas. Further, the computer-assisted image analysis proved to be a fast and reliable method to assess the Ki-67 index in perianal gland neoplasms.


Subject(s)
Anal Gland Neoplasms/diagnosis , Dog Diseases/diagnosis , Ki-67 Antigen/analysis , Adenoma/diagnosis , Adenoma/immunology , Adenoma/metabolism , Adenoma/veterinary , Anal Gland Neoplasms/immunology , Anal Gland Neoplasms/metabolism , Animals , Biomarkers/analysis , Carcinoma/diagnosis , Carcinoma/immunology , Carcinoma/metabolism , Carcinoma/veterinary , Cell Proliferation , Dog Diseases/immunology , Dog Diseases/metabolism , Dogs , Female , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Ki-67 Antigen/biosynthesis , Male , Perianal Glands/chemistry , Perianal Glands/metabolism , Prognosis
2.
Braz. j. vet. res. anim. sci ; 44(2): 96-102, 2007. tab, ilus
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-486882

ABSTRACT

A apoptose e a proliferação celular possuem uma participação importante na tumorigênese, determinando o crescimento tumoral e consequentemente sua agressividade. O presente estudo teve como objetivo avaliar a ocorrência da apoptose associada a proliferação celular em neoplasias mamárias em cadelas e a elas a evolução clínica do paciente. Setenta animais foram submetidos à exérese cirúrgica do tumor, sendo este submetido ao diagnóstico histopatológico e marcação imuno-histoquímica para caspase-3 e Ki-67. Estes marcadores de apoptose e proliferação celular demonstraram grande expressão nas neoplasias malignas, principalmente nos carcinomas, considerado o mais maligno dos tumores. Estes resultados corroboram os dados da literatura e contribuem para um prognóstico tumoral criterioso que complementa a classificação tumoral existente proporcionando uma melhor e maior sobrevida devido a uma adequação do procedimento terapêutico de cada paciente.


Apoptosis, as a cellular event, has an important participation in tumorigenesis, determining the tumoral growth and aggressiveness. The present study had as objective to evaluate the occurrence of apoptosis, associated cellular proliferation, in canine mammary neoplasias and the patient clinical evolution. Seventy dogs had been submitted to surgical excision of the tumor fragment and they were submitted to the histopathologic diagnosis and imunohistochemistry procedure to caspase-3 and the Ki-67. This apoptosis and cellular proliferation markers demonstrated great expression in malignant neoplasias especially carcinoma, considered the most malignant of the tumors. These results confirm consulted literature contributing for a criterious tumoral prognostic complementing the tumoral classification, providing a greater and better supervened due to adequacy of therapeutic procedure of each patient.


Subject(s)
Animals , Female , Apoptosis/physiology , Dogs , Immunohistochemistry , Mammary Neoplasms, Animal/surgery , Cell Proliferation
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