Genomic aberrations are rare in urothelial neoplasms of patients 19 years or younger
Wild P, Giedl J, Stoehr R, Junker K, Boehm S, van Oers J, Zwarthoff E, Blaszyk H, Fine S, Humphrey P, Dehner L, Amin M, Epstein J, Hartmann A. Genomic aberrations are rare in urothelial neoplasms of patients 19 years or younger. The Journal Of Pathology 2006, 211: 18-25. PMID: 17072825, DOI: 10.1002/path.2075.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdolescentAdultAlphapapillomavirusChildChild, PreschoolChromosome AberrationsChromosomes, Human, Pair 9DNA Mismatch RepairDNA Mutational AnalysisDNA, ViralFemaleGene Expression ProfilingGenes, p53HumansImmunohistochemistryIn Situ Hybridization, FluorescenceLoss of HeterozygosityMaleMicrosatellite InstabilityOligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisPapillomaPolymerase Chain ReactionReceptor, Fibroblast Growth Factor, Type 3Urologic NeoplasmsUrotheliumConceptsPatients 19 yearsUrothelial neoplasmsUrothelial papillomaMicrosatellite instabilityClinical outcomesHuman papillomavirusTP53 mutationsHigh-grade papillary urothelial carcinomaNIH consensus panelEvidence of diseaseFavorable clinical outcomeLow malignant potentialChromosome arm 9pPapillary urothelial carcinomaComparative genomic hybridizationPapillary urothelial neoplasmHPV positivityYounger patientsMultifocal tumorsUrothelial carcinomaUrothelial tumorsMalignant potentialPolymerase chain reactionConsensus panelKi-67