Characteristics of vulvar squamous cell carcinoma in Japanese women.

Journal: Pathology International
Published:
Abstract

Although the presence of racial differences in vulvar squamous cell carcinomas has been suggested, fully analyzed data concerning such tumors in Japanese women have not been reported. A total of 21 vulvar squamous cell carcinomas of Japanese women who lived in north-east Japan, were studied with respect to histological subtype, HPV, p53 and p16(INK4a). The majority of tumors consisted of keratinizing and non-keratinizing types (16/21, 76%), all of which were negative for HPV. The remaining five tumors of basaloid, warty or verrucous types were positive for HPV. HPV-negative tumors showed a trend of greater accumulation of gene abnormalities, including p53 gene mutation, than HPV-positive ones. p16(INK4a) overexpression was shown to not always be a marker for vulvar squamous cell carcinoma in Japanese women with activated high-risk HPV.

Authors
Mitsumasa Osakabe, Masahiro Hayashi, Yousei Katayama, Iwao Emura, Keiichi Nemoto, Hajime Umezu, Ken Saitoh, Teiichi Motoyama
Relevant Conditions

Vulvar Cancer