High-throughput tissue microarray analysis of CMYC amplificationin urinary bladder cancer.

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High-throughput tissue microarray analysis of CMYC amplificationin urinary bladder cancer. / Zaharieva, Boriana; Simon, Ronald; Ruiz, Christian; Oeggerli, Martin; Mihatsch, Michael J; Gasser, Thomas; Sauter, Guido; Toncheva, Draga.

In: INT J CANCER, Vol. 117, No. 6, 6, 2005, p. 952-956.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Zaharieva, B, Simon, R, Ruiz, C, Oeggerli, M, Mihatsch, MJ, Gasser, T, Sauter, G & Toncheva, D 2005, 'High-throughput tissue microarray analysis of CMYC amplificationin urinary bladder cancer.', INT J CANCER, vol. 117, no. 6, 6, pp. 952-956. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15986448?dopt=Citation>

APA

Zaharieva, B., Simon, R., Ruiz, C., Oeggerli, M., Mihatsch, M. J., Gasser, T., Sauter, G., & Toncheva, D. (2005). High-throughput tissue microarray analysis of CMYC amplificationin urinary bladder cancer. INT J CANCER, 117(6), 952-956. [6]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15986448?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Zaharieva B, Simon R, Ruiz C, Oeggerli M, Mihatsch MJ, Gasser T et al. High-throughput tissue microarray analysis of CMYC amplificationin urinary bladder cancer. INT J CANCER. 2005;117(6):952-956. 6.

Bibtex

@article{c90d595e14b643a5b4260e42d143f52a,
title = "High-throughput tissue microarray analysis of CMYC amplificationin urinary bladder cancer.",
abstract = "Alterations of chromosome 8, preferentially deletions of 8p and gains of 8q, belong to the most frequent cytogenetic changes in bladder cancer. CMYC on 8q24 is a candidate oncogene in this region. Little is known about the clinical significance of CMYC copy number changes in urinary bladder cancer because its frequency is low and a limited numbers of tumors were analyzed so far. To investigate the impact of CMYC alterations on tumor progression and patient prognosis in bladder cancer, we applied FISH to a tissue microarray containing 2317 bladder cancer samples. Presence of CMYC copy number increase was associated with advanced stage and high grade. CMYC amplifications were seen in 3 of 467 pTa (0.6%), 10 of 247 pT1 (4%) and 11 of 201 pT2-4 urothelial carcinomas (5.5%; p <0.0001), as well as in 1 of 123 G1 (0.8%), 8 of 470 G2 (1.7%) and 17 of 365 G3 urothelial carcinomas (4.7%; p <0.0001). CMYC gains were present in 49 of 467 pTa (10.5%), 39 of 247 pT1 (15.8%) and 43 of 201 pT2-4 urothelial carcinoma (21.4%; p <0.0001), as well as in 7 of 123 G1 (5.7%), 56 of 470 G2 (11.9%) and 72 of 365 G3 urothelial carcinomas (19.7%; p <0.0001). CMYC copy number changes were unrelated to prognosis of bladder cancer patients. We conclude that alterations of the CMYC gene, including copy number gains and amplifications, are linked to genetically unstable bladder cancers that are characterized by a high histologic grade and/or invasive growth. Patient prognosis was not affected by CMYC gene copy number changes.",
author = "Boriana Zaharieva and Ronald Simon and Christian Ruiz and Martin Oeggerli and Mihatsch, {Michael J} and Thomas Gasser and Guido Sauter and Draga Toncheva",
year = "2005",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "117",
pages = "952--956",
journal = "INT J CANCER",
issn = "0020-7136",
publisher = "Wiley-Liss Inc.",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - High-throughput tissue microarray analysis of CMYC amplificationin urinary bladder cancer.

AU - Zaharieva, Boriana

AU - Simon, Ronald

AU - Ruiz, Christian

AU - Oeggerli, Martin

AU - Mihatsch, Michael J

AU - Gasser, Thomas

AU - Sauter, Guido

AU - Toncheva, Draga

PY - 2005

Y1 - 2005

N2 - Alterations of chromosome 8, preferentially deletions of 8p and gains of 8q, belong to the most frequent cytogenetic changes in bladder cancer. CMYC on 8q24 is a candidate oncogene in this region. Little is known about the clinical significance of CMYC copy number changes in urinary bladder cancer because its frequency is low and a limited numbers of tumors were analyzed so far. To investigate the impact of CMYC alterations on tumor progression and patient prognosis in bladder cancer, we applied FISH to a tissue microarray containing 2317 bladder cancer samples. Presence of CMYC copy number increase was associated with advanced stage and high grade. CMYC amplifications were seen in 3 of 467 pTa (0.6%), 10 of 247 pT1 (4%) and 11 of 201 pT2-4 urothelial carcinomas (5.5%; p <0.0001), as well as in 1 of 123 G1 (0.8%), 8 of 470 G2 (1.7%) and 17 of 365 G3 urothelial carcinomas (4.7%; p <0.0001). CMYC gains were present in 49 of 467 pTa (10.5%), 39 of 247 pT1 (15.8%) and 43 of 201 pT2-4 urothelial carcinoma (21.4%; p <0.0001), as well as in 7 of 123 G1 (5.7%), 56 of 470 G2 (11.9%) and 72 of 365 G3 urothelial carcinomas (19.7%; p <0.0001). CMYC copy number changes were unrelated to prognosis of bladder cancer patients. We conclude that alterations of the CMYC gene, including copy number gains and amplifications, are linked to genetically unstable bladder cancers that are characterized by a high histologic grade and/or invasive growth. Patient prognosis was not affected by CMYC gene copy number changes.

AB - Alterations of chromosome 8, preferentially deletions of 8p and gains of 8q, belong to the most frequent cytogenetic changes in bladder cancer. CMYC on 8q24 is a candidate oncogene in this region. Little is known about the clinical significance of CMYC copy number changes in urinary bladder cancer because its frequency is low and a limited numbers of tumors were analyzed so far. To investigate the impact of CMYC alterations on tumor progression and patient prognosis in bladder cancer, we applied FISH to a tissue microarray containing 2317 bladder cancer samples. Presence of CMYC copy number increase was associated with advanced stage and high grade. CMYC amplifications were seen in 3 of 467 pTa (0.6%), 10 of 247 pT1 (4%) and 11 of 201 pT2-4 urothelial carcinomas (5.5%; p <0.0001), as well as in 1 of 123 G1 (0.8%), 8 of 470 G2 (1.7%) and 17 of 365 G3 urothelial carcinomas (4.7%; p <0.0001). CMYC gains were present in 49 of 467 pTa (10.5%), 39 of 247 pT1 (15.8%) and 43 of 201 pT2-4 urothelial carcinoma (21.4%; p <0.0001), as well as in 7 of 123 G1 (5.7%), 56 of 470 G2 (11.9%) and 72 of 365 G3 urothelial carcinomas (19.7%; p <0.0001). CMYC copy number changes were unrelated to prognosis of bladder cancer patients. We conclude that alterations of the CMYC gene, including copy number gains and amplifications, are linked to genetically unstable bladder cancers that are characterized by a high histologic grade and/or invasive growth. Patient prognosis was not affected by CMYC gene copy number changes.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 117

SP - 952

EP - 956

JO - INT J CANCER

JF - INT J CANCER

SN - 0020-7136

IS - 6

M1 - 6

ER -