Article

p16(INK4a) is a marker of good prognosis for primary invasive penile squamous cell carcinoma: a multi-institutional study.

Institute of Pathology, HELIOS Clinic Bad Saarow, Bad Saarow, Germany.
The Journal of urology (impact factor: 4.02). 03/2012; 187(3):899-907. DOI:10.1016/j.juro.2011.10.149 pp.899-907
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT We assessed the prognostic role of p16(INK4a) expression in penile cancer with respect to cancer specific survival.
Based on a multi-institutional collaboration wax embedded tissues from 92 surgically treated patients, including 27 with total and 65 with partial penectomy, were retrospectively evaluated. After a central histopathological review by 1 pathologist a tissue microarray was constructed for p16(INK4a) immunostaining. Two independent pathologists evaluated p16(INK4a) expression, which was correlated with cancer specific survival. The κ statistic was used to assess interobserver variability. Univariate and multivariate Cox proportional hazards analysis was applied to assess the independent effects of prognostic factors on cancer specific survival during a median postoperative followup of 32 months (IQR 6-66).
The κ statistic revealed excellent interobserver agreement (κ 0.934, p <0.001). Two and 5-year cancer specific survival rates for the entire study cohort were 86% and 74%, respectively. The 2 and 5-year rates for patients without and with p16(INK4a) expression differed significantly (73% and 57% vs 95% and 85%, respectively, p = 0.011). Univariate analysis revealed p16(INK4a) expression as a significant prognostic factor with respect to cancer specific survival (p = 0.018). Multivariate analysis identified koilocytosis (HR 0.24, 95% CI 0.07-0.83, p = 0.024), p16(INK4a) expression (HR 0.44, 95% CI 0.23-0.84, p = 0.013), and histological stage (HR 3.54, 95% CI 1.88-6.67, p <0.001) and grade (HR 2.47, 95% CI 1.00-6.09, p = 0.049) as independent prognostic factors for cancer specific survival.
Results show that p16(INK4a) seems to be a prognostic parameter for primary invasive penile cancer with excellent interobserver reproducibility. At pathology laboratories without antibodies against p16(INK4a) conventional histological determination of koilocytosis by the pathologist also appears to provide important prognostic information for cancer specific survival.

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Keywords

1 pathologist
 
5-year cancer specific survival rates
 
cancer specific survival
 
central histopathological review
 
entire study cohort
 
excellent interobserver agreement
 
excellent interobserver reproducibility
 
histological stage
 
independent effects
 
independent pathologists
 
independent prognostic factors
 
interobserver variability
 
median postoperative followup
 
partial penectomy
 
pathology laboratories
 
penile cancer
 
primary invasive penile cancer
 
prognostic factors
 
prognostic role
 
significant prognostic factor