Andrew P. Soisson
Duke University
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Featured researches published by Andrew P. Soisson.
Gynecologic Oncology | 1990
Andrew P. Soisson; John T. Soper; Daniel L. Clarke-Pearson; Andrew Berchuck; Gustavo S. Montana; William T. Creasman
Abstract From 1971 through 1984, 320 women underwent radical hysterectomy as primary therapy of stage IB and IIA cervical cancer. Two hundred forty-eight patients (78%) were treated with surgery alone and 72 patients (22%) received adjuvant postoperative external-beam ratiotherapy. Presence of lymph node metastasis, large lesion (>4 cm in diameter), histologic grade, race (non-caucasian), and age (>40 years) were significant poor prognostic factors for the entire group of patients. Patients treated with surgery alone had a better disease-free survival than those who received combination therapy ( P
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1989
Andrew Berchuck; Andrew P. Soisson; George J. Olt; John T. Soper; Daniel L. Clarke-Pearson; Robert C. Bast; Kenneth S. McCarty
Epidermal growth factor receptor expression in fresh-frozen uterine tissues was studied with the use of monoclonal antibody 528, which recognizes an epitope on the external domain of the epidermal growth factor receptor. Immunohistochemically detectable epidermal growth factor receptor was seen in all uterine cell types in 19 of 20 normal uteri. Staining of endometrial glands and endometrial stromal cells was consistently greater than that of myometrium, and no variation in intensity or distribution of staining was seen during the menstrual cycle. Immunohistochemically detectable epidermal growth factor receptor was found less frequently in endometrial adenocarcinomas than in normal endometrium (p less than 0.01). Thirteen of 40 endometrial adenocarcinomas (32.5%) did not express detectable receptor. Epidermal growth factor receptor expression did not correlate with histologic grade, depth of myometrial invasion, estrogen-progesterone receptor status, the presence of extrauterine metastases, or the development of recurrent disease.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1990
John T. Soper; Andrew Berchuck; George J. Olt; Andrew P. Soisson; Daniel L. Clarke-Pearson; Robert C. Bast
We evaluated 109 women with endometrial carcinoma to determine the accuracy of preoperative tumor-associated antigen levels (CA 125, CA 72, CA 15-3) for prediction of extrauterine disease and whether TAG 72, CA 15-3, or both would improve the predictive value of CA 125 alone. Eleven (12%) of 80 patients with disease confined to the uterus or positive cytologic findings had CA 125 values greater than 35 U/ml versus 12 (65%) of 20 patients with extrauterine metastasis. Therefore CA 125 values had sensitivity of 65% and specificity of 88%. The TAG 72 level was elevated (greater than 6 U/ml) in 4% of patients with localized disease and 30% with metastasis. CA 15-3 was elevated (greater than 30 U/ml) in 17% and 65% in these categories, respectively. TAG 72 or CA 15-3 levels did not improve the combination of sensitivity and specificity of CA 125 alone. In addition, only one of 10 patients with microscopic metastasis (three cases) or positive peritoneal cytology (seven) had elevation of any of these tumor-associated antigen levels. Failure to detect occult metastasis and a high false-positive rate limit the role of these tumor-associated antigen assays in the preoperative evaluation of patients with endometrial carcinoma.
Cancer | 1991
William A. Cliby; Andrew P. Soisson; Andrew Berchuck; Daniel L. Clarke-Pearson
Neuroendocrine small cell carcinoma is a lethal, but rare, tumor that arises most frequently in the lung. Small cell cancer also rarely may occur in the female genital tract, usually in the cervix. This article concerns the fourth reported case of neuroendocrine small cell carcinoma of the vulva. Previously, small cell carcinoma of the vulva has been treated with regional therapy including surgery and radiation. Survival has been poor, however, due to the propensity of these tumors to metastasize early in the course of the disease. Recently, the median survival of patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung has been improved with the use of chemotherapy. The authors review the literature on the treatment of small cell carcinoma of the vulva and report on a patient who was treated successfully with vulvectomy and inguinal lymphadenectomy followed by adjuvant chemotherapy.
International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 1991
Andrew Berchuck; George J. Olt; Andrew P. Soisson; A. Kamel; J.T. Soper; Cinda M. Boyer; Daniel L. Clarke-Pearson; David S. Leslie; Robert C. Bast
Immunohistochemical techniques were used to evaluate the expression of six antigens (CA 125, TAG 72, CA 19-9, OVTL3, DF3, and transferrin receptor) in frozen sections from the primary tumor and metastases of 20 patients with epithelial ovarian cancer. Heterogeneous expression of most antigens was observed within a given tumor nodule, but in each patient the proportion of cells expressing an antigen was similar in the primary tumor and metastases. To explore the stability of the antigenic phenotype of individual cells, we studied CA 125 expression in an ovarian cancer cell line. Cells were separated into CA 125-positive and -negative groups using fluorescence-activated cell sorting. After the two groups of cells were recultured separately, only 38% of cells originally sorted as CA 125 positive still expressed CA 125, whereas 27% of cells sorted as CA 125 negative expressed CA 125. That cells may gain or lose CA 125 expression in culture suggests that expression of CA 125 by ovarian cancer cells is not a stable trait.
International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 1990
Andrew P. Soisson; Andrew Berchuck; Bruce A. Lessey; J.T. Soper; Daniel L. Clarke-Pearson; Kenneth S. McCarty; Robert C. Bast
TAG-72 is a tumor-associated antigen that is expressed by secretory endometrium and most endometrial adenocarcinomas. We used immunohistochemical techniques to quantitate expression of TAG-72, estrogen receptor, and progesterone receptor in 21 normal endometria and 44 endometrial adenocarcinomas. In normal cycling endometrial glands, TAG-72 expression was related inversely to expression of receptors for estrogen and progesterone. This suggests that TAG-72 expression in normal endometrium may be hormonally regulated. Ninety-one percent of endometrial adenocarcinomas expressed immunohistochemically detectable TAG-72. The magnitude of TAG-72 expression did not correlate with other known prognostic factors in endometrial cancer such as histologic grade, depth of myometrial invasion, surgical stage, or steroid receptor status. The production of TAG-72 by most endometrial adenocarcinomas may represent nonspecific expression by cells that have dedifferentiated.
Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1990
Andrew Berchuck; George J. Olt; Lorri Everitt; Andrew P. Soisson; Robert C. Bast; Cinda M. Boyer
Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1990
Andrew P. Soisson; Gerrianne Geszler; John T. Soper; Andrew Berchuck; Daniel L. Clarke-Pearson
Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1992
Andrew P. Soisson; John T. Soper; Andrew Berchuck; Richard K. Dodge; Daniel L. Clarke-Pearson
Cancer Research | 1989
Andrew Berchuck; Andrew P. Soisson; Daniel L. Clarke-Pearson; John T. Soper; Cinda M. Boyer; Robert B. Kinney; Kenneth S. McCarty; Robert C. Bast