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Vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia of the simplex (differentiated) type: a clinicopathologic study including analysis of HPV and p53 expression
Authors:Yang B  Hart W R
Affiliation:Department of Anatomic Pathology, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, OH 44195, USA.
Abstract:The simplex (differentiated) variant of vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia (VIN) has not been well characterized. The authors studied the clinicopathologic features of 12 cases of simplex VIN and obtained follow-up data to assess its relationship to vulvar invasive squamous cell carcinoma (InvSCC). Expression of p53 protein was analyzed immunohistochemically and compared with adjacent non-neoplastic epidermal lesions. Assessment of human papilloma virus (HPV) deoxyribonucleic acid was done by polymerase chain reaction amplification and in situ hybridization. All patients were of postmenopausal age (mean age, 66.8 years). Three patients had a history of prior vulvar InvSCC and one had a separate synchronous vulvar InvSCC. Squamous hyperplasia was present in the adjacent epidermis in 10 patients and lichen sclerosus (LS) was present in four patients. Histologically, simplex VIN differed from "classic" VIN by its highly differentiated features. The characteristic features included parakeratosis, thickened epidermis with elongated and anastomosing rete ridges, enlarged abnormal keratinocytes with premature eosinophilic cytoplasmic differentiation extending deeply within the epidermis, whorling of enlarged keratinocytes or keratin pearl formation within rete ridges, prominent intercellular bridges, and dysplastic basilar cells. One patient had minimal microinvasion (0.6 mm). Ten of 12 patients had positive p53 immunostaining staining with suprabasilar extension of p53 positive cells in each patient. The labeling index (LI) of basilar cells ranged from 0% to 99% (median, 94.5%). Non-neoplastic lesions in the adjacent epidermis had p53-positive basal cells in nine of 11 evaluable cases. The LI was significantly lower in these lesions, with a median of 4% in squamous hyperplasia and 7.5% in LS; none had suprabasilar extension of p53-positive cells. HPV (type 31/35/51) was identified in only one simplex VIN--a p53-negative lesion. Staining for p53 often delineated sharply the junction between simplex VIN and squamous hyperplasia. Four patients subsequently developed vulvar InvSCC at 5, 6, 9, and 55 months. All four InvSCCs were of the conventional keratinizing type and were HPV negative, as were the one synchronous and two prior InvSCCs. The authors conclude that (1) simplex VIN has a strong association with vulvar InvSCC and is a probable precursor lesion of HPV-negative vulvar InvSCCs, (2) HPV is very uncommon in simplex VIN and probably does not play an important role in its genesis, (3) alteration of the p53 gene appears to be involved in the development of simplex VIN, and (4) immunostaining for p53 protein may be helpful in the differential diagnosis of simplex VIN.
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