Investigator

Silvia Helena Rabelo-Santos

Professor · Universidade Federal de Goiás, Faculdade de Farmácia

Research Interests

SHRSilvia Helena Rab…
Papers(2)
Association of CD133,…Gastrin-releasing pep…
Collaborators(10)
Vanesca de Souza LinoAdhemar Longatto-FilhoCamila Alves da SilvaCaroline Brunetto de …Daniela Baumann Corne…Enrique BoccardoLara TerminiLouise De BrotLuiz Carlos ZeferinoMartina Lichtenfels
Institutions(7)
Universidade Federal …Universidade De So Pa…Molecular Oncology Un…Unknown InstitutionInstituto Do Cncer Do…Ac Camargo HospitalUniversidade Estadual…

Papers

Association of CD133, ALDH1, CD117 and OCT4 expression with prognosis of patients with cervical cancer

Cancer stem cells (CSC), a small population of neoplastic cells, are associated with worse prognosis. The aim of this study was to evaluate the expression of ALDH1, CD117, CD133 and OCT4; potential markers of CSC; and their associations with the prognosis of women diagnosed with cervical cancer. This retrospective cohort study included 126 women diagnosed with cervical cancer whose biopsies were analyzed by immunohistochemistry. Median values of marked cells were used to define cutoff points for low and high expression. For specific survival, multivariate analyses showed statistical significance for lymph node metastases (HR 8.15; 95% CI 3.00-22.18) and borderline significance for high CD133 expression (p = 0.058). For overall survival, multivariate analyses showed statistical significance for IIA-IVB staging (HR 4.60; 95% CI 1.46-14.56), lymph node metastases (HR 5.13; 95% CI 12.02-13.03) and high CD133 expression (2.67; 95% CI 1.11-6.43). Considering only women with SCC, the same clinicopathological variables were associated with worse specific and overall survival in univariate analyses. However, higher expression of CD 133 (HR 11.10; 95% CI 2.42-50.94 and 6.00; 95% CI 2.02-17.87) and staging IIA-IVB (HR 5.96; 95% CI 1.30-27.34 and HR 12.47; 95% CI 2.45-63.54) respectively impacted negatively specific and overall survival, as multivariate analyses showed. Secondarily, it was observed that ALDH1 expression was associated with adenocarcinoma and CD117 expression with squamous cells carcinoma. Higher expression of CD133 was associated with worse specific and overall survival, indicating that it could have relevance as a clinical marker and therapeutic target.

Gastrin-releasing peptide receptor: a promising new biomarker to identify cervical precursor lesions and cancer

This study aimed to verify the relation between gastrin-releasing peptide receptor (GRPR), oncogenic Human Papillomavirus (HPV) and cervical lesions severity. GRPR mRNA levels were evaluated in cervical cancer-derived cell lines and in primary keratinocytes expressing HPV16 oncogenes by RT-PCR. GRPR protein expression was assessed by immunohistochemistry in organotypic cell cultures derived from keratinocytes transduced with HPV16 oncogenes and in 208 cervical samples, including 59 non-neoplastic tissue, 28 cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 3 (CIN3), 44 squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) and 77 adenocarcinomas (ADC). Generic primers (GP5+/GP6+) were used to identify HPV infection in tissue samples. Experiments involving cell lines were analyzed through non-parametric tests (Kruskal Wallis), and Fisher's Exact Test for human tissues samples. All statistical tests were considered significant at p <0.05. Immunohistochemical evaluation was conducted independently and blindly by two observers (AD- LO). Any discordant findings were resolved through discussion to reach a consensus score. GRPR mRNA levels were not increased in cells expressing HPV16 or HPV18 oncogenes. However, at the protein level, GRPR was upregulated in organotypic cell cultures containing HPV oncogenes. Besides, it was identified an association between GRPR expression and cervical lesion severity (p < 0.0001). The detection rate of high-risk HPV DNA was directly correlated with cervical disease. Nonetheless, HPV infection was not directly associated with GRPR in cervical samples. GRPR expression is highly predictive of cervical lesion severity, irrespective of HPV infection and might contribute to improving patient's therapeutic management as well as being used a marker of disease progression.

49Works
2Papers
12Collaborators
Uterine Cervical NeoplasmsBiomarkers, TumorPrognosisThrombosisVaginosis, Bacterial

Positions

1995–

Professor

Universidade Federal de Goiás · Faculdade de Farmácia