Investigator

Paula Monteiro

Instituo Cuf Porto

PMPaula Monteiro
Papers(3)
Impact of cervicovagi…P-cadherin overexpres…Preliminary outcomes …
Collaborators(10)
Hugo SousaRita CanárioRui HenriqueRui MedeirosSara RicardoSofia SaltaTatiana VarandasViola Heinzelmann-Sch…Ana BarbosaAna Peixoto
Institutions(8)
Instituo Cuf PortoMolecular Oncology Un…i3S - Institute for R…Ipo PortoInstituto Universitár…Instituto Português d…University Hospital o…IPO-Porto

Papers

Impact of cervicovaginal microbiome on the risk of cervical abnormalities development

AbstractThe vaginal microbiome has emerged as potentially influencing the natural history of Human Papillomavirus (HPV) infections and their clinical impact. We aimed to characterize the vaginal microbiome in samples from 807 high‐risk HPVs (Hr‐HPV) positive women with a mean age of 41.45 ± 10.79 years who participated in the Regional Cervical Cancer Screening Program from the Northern Region of Portugal. Microbiome analysis was performed with commercial kits for the detection of 21 microorganisms. The most frequent microorganisms were Ureaplasma parvum (52.5%), Gardnerella vaginalis (GV) (34.5%), Atopobium vaginae (AV) (32.6%), Lacto (30.7%), and Mycoplasma hominis (MH) (23.5%). The distribution according to age reveals that MH, Mega1, GV, BVab2, AV, and Mob were more prevalent in women older than 41 years of age (p < 0.050), while Lacto is significantly decreased in this group (23.5% vs. 39.4%, p < 0.001; RR = 0.47). The risk analysis showed that Hr‐HPV‐16/‐18 and Hr‐HPV‐9val genotypes are associated with an increased risk of developing cervical abnormalities, while Lacto (p < 0.001; odd ratio [OR] = 0.33), GV (p = 0.0111; OR = 0.41), AV (p = 0.033; OR = 0.53) and Mob (p = 0.022; OR = 0.29) are associated with protection. Similar results were found for the risk of development atypical squamous cells cannot exclude HSIL/high‐grade squamous intraepithelial lesion. Overall, the multivariate analysis confirmed that lactobacillus and bacteria associated with bacterial vaginosis (GV, AV, and Mob) are associated with protection against the development of cervical abnormalities. This study provides important data to be included in the future management of risk stratification for Hr‐HPV‐positive women.

P-cadherin overexpression is associated with early transformation of the Fallopian tube epithelium and aggressiveness of tubo-ovarian high-grade serous carcinoma

Abstract Tubo-ovarian high-grade serous carcinoma (HGSC) with proficient homologous recombination (HR) DNA repair (HRP) accounts for approximately 50% of cases and is associated with platinum-resistance and poor prognosis. We hypothesize that the acquisition of hybrid phenotypes displaying both epithelial and mesenchymal (E/M) features may be involved in the malignant transformation and tumour dissemination in this subgroup. Therefore, we analysed, by digital pathology, the expression and prognostic significance of 3 classic cadherins (E-cadherin, epithelial marker; N-cadherin, mesenchymal marker; and P-cadherin, candidate marker of hybrid E/M) in 577 formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded human samples representing the putative stepwise serous carcinogenesis in the Fallopian tube epithelium (FTE). We observed a non-canonical N-to-P-cadherin switch along the carcinogenic progression, with a statistically significant overexpression of P-cadherin in pre-malignant and malignant samples, compared to the control FTE. Interestingly, this overexpression was most pronounced in precursor lesions and HGSC cells from malignant ascites. Tumours with high P-cadherin expression were significantly associated with worse overall survival, especially in the subgroup without BRCA1/2 mutations. Transient P-cadherin knock-down resulted in in vitro significant reduction of functional hybrid E/M hallmarks, namely decreased anoikis resistance, reduced collective migration and invasion in a representative platinum-resistant HRP cell line. Taken together, our results suggest that P-cadherin overexpression is an early event in the serous carcinogenesis and may be involved in hybrid E/M activation in HRP-HGSC, further supporting this adhesion molecule as a promising biomarker for this poor prognostic subgroup.

3Papers
27Collaborators