Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2059068 | Morphologie | 2014 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Renal carcinomas are histologically and prognostically heterogeneous. Genomic as well as chromosomal studies of these tumors have permitted a better comprehension of molecular mechanisms implicated in their development and progression. The most frequent histological subtypes are characterized by recurrent cytogenetic abnormalities, such as the loss of the chromosome 3Â short arm involving a VHL gene copy in clear cell renal carcinomas, or trisomies 7Â and 17Â in papillary renal cell carcinomas. New histological subtypes like renal carcinomas associated with Xp11.2Â translocations have also been individualized. Besides diagnosis, some chromosomal aberrations like the loss of a short arm of chromosome 9Â in different renal carcinoma histological subtypes have a worse prognostic impact. The identification of chromosomal shuffles contributes in backing histological diagnosis and in precising the individual prognosis of patients. This review describes chromosomal abnormalities associated to renal carcinomas and their impact for an accurate classification of these tumors and the evaluation of their prognosis.
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Authors
F. Dugay, J. Dagher, G. Verhoest, C. Henry, S. Jaillard, Y. Arlot-Bonnemains, K. Bensalah, C. Vigneau, N. Rioux-Leclercq, M.-A. Belaud-Rotureau,