AI Article Synopsis

  • The study measured nuclear DNA content in pre-cancerous lesions of the cervix and bladder tumors, finding a notable increase in mean DNA content and variations in nuclear types (diploid, polyploid, and aneuploid) in both conditions.
  • DNA deviation analysis indicated that normal tissues showed no malignancy grade, while dysplastic cervical tissues and higher-grade bladder cancers exhibited increasing malignancy values, with the highest in carcinoma in situ (CIS) and grade 3.
  • Statistical correlations highlighted that in the cervix, malignancy grade was a key distinguishing feature, whereas in the bladder, the percentage of diploid nuclei was the most significant, with mild dysplasia in the cervix resembling the early stages of bladder carcinoma in DNA

Article Abstract

The nuclear DNA content was measured in preneoplastic lesions of the uterine cervix and in papillary carcinomas of the bladder. Three groups of features were calculated from the raw data: basic DNA, DNA deviation and DNA distribution. The basic DNA features, concerning both the cervix and the bladder, showed a progressive increase in the mean DNA content, a decrease in the percentage of diploid nuclei and steadily increasing values of polyploid and aneuploid nuclei. Among the DNA deviation features, the malignancy grade value was zero in the normal cervical epithelium and in the normal urothelium. An increase in this value was evident in moderate dysplasia and in urothelial papillary carcinoma of grade 2, the highest value being in CIS and in grade 3. Concerning the DNA distribution features, the values of the 15th and 95th percentiles and their difference were progressively higher both in the cervix and in the bladder, expressing a continuous shift and spread of the DNA content measurements in the different diagnostic categories, with respect to normal epithelium and urothelium. The statistical analysis showed that the strongest correlation is between 2c D.I. and % of polyploid nuclei in the cervix and between M.I. and % of aneuploid nuclei greater than 4c in the bladder. In the cervix the most discriminating feature is the Malignancy Grade, whereas in the bladder it is the percentage of diploid nuclei. The comparison between the results of the three groups of features showed that: 1) Mild dysplasia of the cervix and urothelial papillary carcinoma of grade 1 showed similar changes in DNA features. Both were basically characterized by increased proliferative activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0344-0338(88)80098-0DOI Listing

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