The Many Uses of p53 Immunohistochemistry in Gynecological Pathology: Proceedings of the ISGyP Companion Society Session at the 2020 USCAP Annual9 Meeting

Ancillary immunohistochemistry (IHC) has become a reliable adjunct for subclassification of gynecological neoplasms. An important recent development was optimization and validation of p53 IHC, where 3 abnormal IHC patterns (nuclear overexpression, complete absence, cytoplasmic) were shown to predict underlying TP53 mutations with high accuracy in ovarian carcinomas. p53 IHC now helps in distinguishing high-grade serous from low-grade serous carcinomas. Thereafter, the new interpretation of p53 IHC was quickly adapted for other purposes and similar accuracies were shown in endometrial carcinomas, vulvar squamous cell carcinomas, and ovarian mucinous tumors. However, it required further refinement of the p53 IHC interpretation criteria for each tumor site. A proportion of endometrial endometrioid carcinomas shows an ultramutated or hypermutated genotype due to underlying POLE mutations or mismatch repair deficiency sometimes causing subclonal TP53 mutations, and their distribution can be visualized by p53 IHC. Squamous cell carcinomas and ovarian mucinous tumors show a phenomenon called terminal differentiation where basal cells demonstrate an abnormal pattern of p53 IHC but apical cells do not despite an underlying TP53 mutation. High-grade progression of adult granulosa cell tumors due to a subclonal TP53 mutation has been recently described. Another use of p53 IHC is triaging gynecological sarcomas for molecular testing based on the assumption that TP53-mutated gynecological...
Source: International Journal of Gynecological Pathology - Category: Pathology Tags: PROCEEDINGS OF THE ISGYP COMPANION SOCIETY SESSION AT THE USCAP 2020 ANNUAL MEETING: REVIEW ARTICLES Source Type: research