Assessment of endothelial cell proliferation in primary breast carcinoma and its association with axillary lymph node status

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Abstract

The correlation between angiogenesis as assessed by endothelial cell proliferation in blood/lymphatic vessels in primary breast carcinomas, and axillary lymph-node metastasis was studied using a case-control design. Primary breast carcinomas, < 2 cm in diameter, from 26 axillary node positive patients (case), were compared with neoplasms from 45 node-negative patients (control). Vascularity, as assessed by vessel density, and endothelial cell proliferation were measured in a single tissue section using a double immunohistochemical staining technique using MIBI (Ki-67) and FVIII antibodies. No association between vascularity and node status was found (P > 0.70). Node positive breast carcinomas had, on average, significantly smaller proliferating vessels (140 ± 7 μm in perimeter) in the primary lesion when compared with node negative tumours (164 ± 7 μm in perimeter (P < 0.02). In addition, the frequency of relatively small vessels (less than 180 μm in perimeter) with proliferating endothelium was higher in node positive carcinomas than lymph-node negative neoplasms (P < 0.03). This association between node status and the size and frequency of blood/lymphatic vessels with proliferating endothelium in primary carcinoma may have important implications in metastasis. (C) 2000 Harcourt Publishers Ltd.

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Edel, M., Robbins, P., D’Antuono, M., Harvey, J., Papadimitriou, J., Mitchell, C., & Dawkins, H. (2000). Assessment of endothelial cell proliferation in primary breast carcinoma and its association with axillary lymph node status. Breast, 9(1), 28–34. https://doi.org/10.1054/brst.1999.0082

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