Protein Information

ID 1713
Name Ki 67
Synonyms Antigen KI 67; Antigen identified by monoclonal antibody Ki 67; KIA; Ki 67; MKI67; Proliferation related Ki 67 antigen; Antigen identified by monoclonal antibody Ki 67s; Ki 67s…

Compound Information

ID 1708
Name ACC
CAS 1-aminocyclopropanecarboxylic acid

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
18515402 Advani A, Vaikkakara S, Gill MS, Arun CS, Pearce SH, Ball SG, James RA, Lennard TW, Bliss RD, Quinton R, Johnson SJ: Impact of standardised reporting in adrenocortical carcinoma: a single centre clinicopathological review. J Clin Pathol. 2008 Aug;61(8):939-44. Epub 2008 May 30.
AIMS: Structured multicentre efforts are needed if the prognosis of adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is to be improved. Data collection may be enhanced through standardised histopathological reporting using criteria such as the recently published Royal College of Pathologists' (UK) minimum dataset (MDS). This study aimed to perform a clinicopathological review of the adult patients treated at the Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle upon Tyne, in the 10 years preceding the MDS. METHODS: Case records were examined for all patients diagnosed with ACC between 1996 and 2006. Pathology was reviewed and compared with the Royal College of Pathologists' MDS along with the original reports. A systematic evaluation of Ki-67 immunolabelling was also performed. RESULTS: Eleven patients with ACC were diagnosed and treated. Histopathological reporting according to the MDS identified more features of malignancy than in the original reports (8.5+/-1.2 versus 5.1+/-0.8, p <0.02). The median number of microscopic criteria of malignancy was 7 (range 5-10), with > or =5 features occurring in all cases. The most commonly observed features of malignancy were diffuse architecture, <25% clear cells, confluent necrosis, abnormal mitoses and mitotic count > or =6 per 50 high-power fields. Capsular invasion and > or =8 MDS criteria of malignancy were associated with a worse outcome (each p <0.01). Median Ki-67 index was 19.0% (range 3.7-44.1%) and was not apparently related to survival. CONCLUSIONS: Standardised criteria for histopathological reporting of ACC will improve the accuracy of data for cancer registration and may also assist in individual patient stratification. An elevated Ki-67 index is a feature of ACC, although it does not appear to predict individual patient survival.
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