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Dive into the research topics where Anna Laury is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Laury.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

A discrete population of squamocolumnar junction cells implicated in the pathogenesis of cervical cancer

Michael Herfs; Yusuke Yamamoto; Anna Laury; Xia Wang; Marisa R. Nucci; Margaret E. McLaughlin-Drubin; Karl Münger; Sarah Feldman; Frank McKeon; Wa Xian; Christopher P. Crum

Infection by carcinogenic human papillomaviruses (HPV) results in precancers [cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN)] and cancers near the ectoendocervical squamocolumnar (SC) junction of the cervix. However, the specific cells targeted by HPV have not been identified and the cellular origin of cervical cancer remains elusive. In this study, we uncovered a discrete population of SC junctional cells with unique morphology and gene-expression profile. We also demonstrated that the selected junctional biomarkers were expressed by a high percentage of high-grade CIN and cervical cancers associated with carcinogenic HPVs but rarely in ectocervical/transformation zone CINs or those associated with noncarcinogenic HPVs. That the original SC junction immunophenotype was not regenerated at new SC junctions following excision, not induced by expression of viral oncoproteins in foreskin keratinocytes, and not seen in HPV-related precursors of the vagina, vulva, and penis further support the notion that junctional cells are the source of cervical cancer. Taken together, our findings suggest that carcinogenic HPV-related CINs and cervical cancers are linked to a small, discrete cell population that localizes to the SC junction of the cervix, expresses a unique gene expression signature, and is not regenerated after excision. The findings in this study uncover a potential target for cervical cancer prevention, provide insight into the risk assessment of cervical lesions, and establish a model for elucidating the pathway to cervical cancer following carcinogenic HPV infection.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2011

A comprehensive analysis of PAX8 expression in human epithelial tumors.

Anna Laury; Ruth Perets; Huiying Piao; Jeffrey F. Krane; Justine A. Barletta; Christopher A. French; Lucian R. Chirieac; Rosina T. Lis; Massimo Loda; Jason L. Hornick; Ronny Drapkin; Michelle S. Hirsch

PAX8 is a paired-box gene important in embryogenesis of the thyroid, Müllerian, and renal/upper urinary tracts, and expression of PAX8 has been previously described in carcinomas from each of these sites. However, a large study including a wide variety of epithelial neoplasms from multiple organ sites other than the thyroid, kidney, or Müllerian system has not been performed. The goal of this study was to evaluate the utility of PAX8 immunostaining based on the evaluation of a wide range of epithelial tumors. PAX8 immunohistochemistry was performed on 1357 tumors (486 tumors in whole-tissue sections and 871 tumors in tissue microarrays, predominantly epithelial) from multiple organs. Only nuclear staining was scored as positive, and tumors were evaluated for the extent and intensity of staining. Western blot analysis with PAX8 was also performed on multiple tumor cell lines. Nuclear PAX8 staining was present in 91% (60 of 66) of thyroid tumors, 90% (158 of 176) of renal cell carcinomas (RCCs), 81% (13 of 16) of renal oncocytomas, 99% (164 of 165) of high-grade ovarian serous carcinomas, 71% (32 of 49) of nonserous ovarian epithelial neoplasms, 91% (10 of 11) of cervical epithelial lesions, and 98% (152 of 155) of endometrial adenocarcinomas. Of the remaining 719 evaluated tumors, only 30 cases (4%), including 12 thymic neoplasms, 3 bladder urothelial carcinomas, 4 lung squamous cell carcinomas, 2 esophageal adenocarcinomas, 1 pancreatic adenocarcinoma, 2 cholangiocarcinomas, 1 ovarian Sertoli-Leydig cell tumor, 1 ovarian sex cord stromal tumor, 3 testicular mixed germ cell tumors, and 1 acinic cell carcinoma, showed at least weak or focal PAX8 positivity. The unexpected finding was diffuse, moderate staining of PAX8 in a subset of thymomas and thymic carcinomas. The 689 remaining tumors, including but not limited to those from the prostate, colon, stomach, liver, adrenal gland, and head and neck, and small cell carcinomas from the lung, cervix, and ovary, were PAX8 negative. PAX8 specificity was confirmed by Western blot analysis, as expression was detected only in ovarian and RCC cell lines. These results show that PAX8 is a highly sensitive marker for thyroid, renal, Müllerian, and thymic tumors. Importantly, all lung adenocarcinomas, breast and adrenal neoplasms, and the majority of gastrointestinal tumors were negative for PAX8. Therefore, PAX8 is an excellent marker for confirming primary tumor site. In a subset of cases, additional markers, including but not limited to thyroid transcription factor-1, RCC, and Wilms tumor-1, may be needed to distinguish between the 3 most common PAX8-positive tumors.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2010

PAX8 reliably distinguishes ovarian serous tumors from malignant mesothelioma.

Anna Laury; Jason L. Hornick; Ruth Perets; Jeffrey F. Krane; Joseph M. Corson; Ronny Drapkin; Michelle S. Hirsch

Ovarian serous neoplasms can have morphologic overlap with malignant mesothelioma. The distinction is clinically important, yet most studies have failed to identify immunostains that reliably distinguish these 2 tumor types. Recently, transcription factor PAX8 was shown to be a sensitive and relatively specific marker for Müllerian tumors. In addition, some studies suggest that h-caldesmon is sensitive and specific for mesothelioma when compared with serous ovarian tumors. The goal of this study was to evaluate whether PAX8 and h-caldesmon expression can successfully distinguish mesothelioma from serous ovarian tumors. Immunohistochemistry was carried out using PAX8 and h-caldesmon antibodies on archival tissue from 254 ovarian serous tumors and 50 mesothelial tumors. Nuclear and cytoplasmic immunoreactivity were considered positive for PAX8 and h-caldesmon, respectively. PAX8 staining was present in 99% of high-grade serous ovarian carcinomas and all (100%) low-grade ovarian carcinomas and serous borderline tumors; however, only 74% of these cases (188/254) were diffusely positive in more than 50% of tumors cells, and intensity ranged from strong to weak. None of the pleural malignant mesotheliomas were reactive with PAX8. However, 2/23 (9%) peritoneal malignant mesotheliomas showed focal and/or weak staining for PAX8; the remaining cases were negative. Two well-differentiated papillary mesotheliomas and 1 multicystic mesothelioma each showed some staining for PAX8. h-caldesmon was negative in all serous neoplasms and all mesothelial neoplasms, except 1 pleural malignant mesothelioma which showed patchy immunoreactivity. Strong PAX8 staining is highly specific (P<0.00001) for ovarian serous tumors when compared with malignant mesotheliomas of the peritoneum and pleura. The presence of weak staining for PAX8 in the 3 “noninvasive” mesotheliomas questions the use for PAX8 in this differential diagnosis. On the basis of this study, h-caldesmon is not a useful marker for mesothelioma.


Cancer | 2013

Oncogenic mutations in cervical cancer: genomic differences between adenocarcinomas and squamous cell carcinomas of the cervix.

Alexi A. Wright; Brooke E. Howitt; Andrea P. Myers; Suzanne E. Dahlberg; Emanuele Palescandolo; Paul Van Hummelen; Laura E. MacConaill; Melina Shoni; Nikhil Wagle; Robert T. Jones; Charles M. Quick; Anna Laury; Ingrid T. Katz; William C. Hahn; Ursula A. Matulonis; Michelle S. Hirsch

Cervical cancer is the second leading cause of cancer deaths among women worldwide. The objective of this study was to describe the most common oncogenic mutations in cervical cancers and to explore genomic differences between the 2 most common histologic subtypes: adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2011

Fallopian tube correlates of ovarian serous borderline tumors.

Anna Laury; Gang Ning; Charles M. Quick; Jonathan G. Bijron; Mana M. Parast; Rebeca A. Betensky; Sara O. Vargas; Frank McKeon; Wa Xian; Marisa R. Nucci; Christopher P. Crum

Ovarian serous borderline tumors (SBTs) are presumed to originate in the ovarian cortex or peritoneal surface. The pathogenetic role of the fallopian tube (FT) is unclear; however, recently, secretory cell outgrowths (SCOUTs) lacking PAX2 expression were described in benign FTs. This study addressed (1) the differentiation characteristics of SBTs and (2) the frequency of SCOUTs lacking PAX2 expression in the FTs of patients with SBTs and compared (3) SCOUT morphology and (4) PAX2 expression with SBTs. SBTs and FT epithelium shared both ciliated (p73) and secretory (HMFG2) differentiation. PAX2-null SCOUT frequency in FT cross-sections from patients with SBTs was 0.28 (110 of 398) versus 0.112 in benign hysterectomies and nearly 0 in pediatric and postpartum sterilization specimens (P=<0.001). When adjusted for age, the differences narrowed but remained significant (P=0.010). SCOUTs were heterogeneous, some displaying ciliated differentiation and papillary architecture. Two cases of discrete multifocal papillary SCOUTs in the FTs were associated with SBTs. All SBTs had heterogeneous PAX2 staining with areas of PAX2 loss. This study shows for the first time that PAX2-null SCOUTs are more common in the oviducts of women with SBTs and that loss of PAX2 expression occurs in most SBTs. These discoveries link both morphologic and functional gene (PAX2) alterations in the oviduct to SBTs, similar to that reported in high-grade serous carcinoma. Further study is warranted to clarify the relationship of the oviduct to serous neoplasia.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2013

Cervical squamocolumnar junction-specific markers define distinct, clinically relevant subsets of low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions

Michael Herfs; Carlos Parra-Herran; Brooke E. Howitt; Anna Laury; Marisa R. Nucci; Sarah Feldman; Cynthia A. Jimenez; Frank McKeon; Wa Xian; Christopher P. Crum

Low-grade cervical squamous abnormalities (low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions [LSIL, CIN1]) can be confused with or followed by high-grade (HSIL, CIN2/3) lesions, expending considerable resources. Recently, a cell of origin for cervical neoplasia was proposed in the squamocolumnar junction (SCJ); HSILs are almost always SCJ+, but LSILs include SCJ+ and SCJ− subsets. Abnormal cervical biopsies from 214 patients were classified by 2 experienced pathologists (panel) as LSIL or HSIL using published criteria. SILs were scored SCJ+ and SCJ− using SCJ-specific antibodies (keratin7, AGR2, MMP7, and GDA). Assessments of interobserver agreement, p16ink4 staining pattern, proliferative index, and outcome were compared. The original diagnostician agreed with the panel diagnosis of HSIL and SCJ− LSIL in all cases (100%). However, for SCJ+ LSIL, panelists disagreed with each other by 15% and with the original diagnostician by 46.2%. Comparing SCJ− and SCJ+ LSILs, 60.2% and 94.9% were p16ink4 positive, 23% and 74.4% showed strong (full-thickness) p16ink4 staining, and 0/54 (0%) and 8/33 (24.2%) with follow-up had an HSIL outcome, respectively. Some SCJ+ LSILs are more likely to both generate diagnostic disagreement and be associated with HSIL. Conversely, SCJ− LSILs generate little observer disagreement and, when followed, have a very low risk of HSIL outcome. Thus, SCJ biomarkers in conjunction with histology may segregate LSILs with very low risk of HSIL outcome and conceivably could be used as a management tool to reduce excess allocation of resources to the follow-up of these lesions.


Modern Pathology | 2012

PAX2-null secretory cell outgrowths in the oviduct and their relationship to pelvic serous cancer

Charles M. Quick; Gang Ning; Jonathan G. Bijron; Anna Laury; Tay Seok Wei; Eleanor Chen; Sara O. Vargas; Rebecca A. Betensky; Frank McKeon; Wa Xian; Christopher P. Crum

With the exception of germ-line mutations in ovarian cancer susceptibility genes, genetic predictors for women destined for ovarian serous cancer cannot be identified in advance of malignancy. We recently showed that benign secretory cell outgrowths (SCOUTs) in the oviduct are increased in frequency with concurrent serous cancer and typically lack PAX2 expression (PAX2-null). The present study examined the relationship of PAX2-null SCOUTs to high-grade serous cancers by comparing oviducts from women with benign gynecologic conditions and high-grade serous cancers. PAX2-null SCOUTs were identified by immunostaining and computed as a function of location, frequency (F) per number of cross-sections examined, and age. Six hundred thirty-nine cross-sections from 35 serous cancers (364) and 35 controls (275) were examined. PAX2-null SCOUTs consisted of discrete linear stretches of altered epithelium ranging from cuboidal/columnar, to pseudostratified, the latter including ciliated differentiation. They were evenly distributed among proximal and fimbrial tubal sections. One hundred fourteen (F=0.31) and 45 (F=0.16) PAX2-null SCOUTs were identified in cases and controls, respectively. Mean individual case-specific frequencies for cases and controls were 0.39 and 0.14, respectively. SCOUT frequency increased significantly with age in both groups (P=0.01). However, when adjusted for age and the number of sections examined, the differences in frequency between cases and controls remained significant at P=0.006. This study supports a relationship between discrete PAX2 gene dysregulation in the oviduct and both increasing age and, more significantly, the presence of co-existing serous cancer. We propose a unique co-variable in benign oviductal epithelium—the PAX2-null SCOUT—that reflects underlying dysregulation in genes linked to serous neoplasia.


Biomaterials | 2011

Liposomes for HIV prophylaxis

Nikita Kiran Malavia; David Zurakowski; Avi Schroeder; Amy M. Princiotto; Anna Laury; Hila Epstein Barash; Joseph Sodroski; Robert Langer; Navid Madani; Daniel S. Kohane

There are approximately 33.4 million adults living with HIV worldwide of which an estimated 15.7 million are women. Although there has been enormous progress in the therapy of HIV/AIDS, treatment is not curative. Prevention is therefore of paramount importance, but vaccine-based and microbicidal approaches are still in their infancy. Since women acquire the virus largely through sexual intercourse, we developed liposomal systems potentially suitable for intra-vaginal use to prevent HIV-1 infection. We formulated liposomes from a range of naturally-occurring and synthetic lipids with varying physicochemical properties, and tested their ability to inhibit infection of transformed cells that express receptors specific to the virus. We identified formulations with the most favorable balance between decreasing HIV infection and causing cytotoxicity (i.e. therapeutic index). The therapeutic index improved with increasing cardiolipin content, and degree of unsaturation. Tissue reaction to these formulations was benign after intra-vaginal instillation in an in vivo female mouse model. These results support the potential use of cardiolipin-based liposomes enriched with synthetic lipids as microbicides for the prevention of HIV infection in women.


Nature Reviews Endocrinology | 2010

Lymphocytic hypophysitis with diabetes insipidus in a young man.

Ole-Petter R. Hamnvik; Anna Laury; Edward R. Laws; Ursula B. Kaiser

Background. A 29-year-old man was referred to a multidisciplinary pituitary clinic with a 3.5-year history of central diabetes insipidus, initially presumed to be idiopathic based on a normal MRI scan of the pituitary gland. Subsequent scanning revealed a suprasellar mass, which demonstrated progressive enlargement on serial imaging. He also developed hypogonadotropic hypogonadism.Investigations. Measurement of levels of serum morning fasting cortisol, adrenocorticotropic hormone, total testosterone, luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, prolactin, insulin-like growth factor 1, TSH and free T4, MRI of the pituitary gland and a transsphenoidal biopsy of a pituitary mass were performed.Diagnosis. Lymphocytic hypophysitis presenting with diabetes insipidus, with development of hypogonadotropic hypogonadism and a suprasellar mass.Management. The patient was treated with intranasal desmopressin and transdermal testosterone. The underlying lymphocytic hypophysitis was initially managed conservatively with serial MRI and visual field testing. No immunosuppressant medication was given and, aside from the diagnostic transsphenoidal biopsy, no surgical intervention was required. He subsequently developed secondary hypothyroidism, secondary adrenal insufficiency and growth hormone deficiency. These disorders were managed with levothyroxine and prednisone.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2012

Utility of PAX2 as a marker for diagnosis of endometrial intraepithelial neoplasia.

Charles M. Quick; Anna Laury; Nicolas M. Monte; George L. Mutter

Diagnosis of endometrial intraepithelial neoplasia (EIN) requires learning new criteria. Two trainees rendered diagnoses based on biopsy findings, and then measured the effect of reviewing PAX2 on their interpretation. Fifty-two endometrial biopsy specimens diagnosed as having EIN were evaluated using EIN criteria. Background endometrial pattern, altered differentiation, and any features complicating diagnosis were noted. PAX2 stains were scored as confusing, helpful, or noncontributory. Fifty-two cases generated 104 passes; 82% were rediagnosed as EIN. The diagnosis was complicated because of altered differentiation (14%), EIN and background separation (13%), large lesions lacking background (11%), and secretory background (8%). PAX2 was most helpful in cases with secretory backgrounds and when EIN lacked adjacent normal tissue, and most confusing when scoring was ambiguous (14%). The diagnosis of EIN can be difficult when: (1) the lesion cannot be easily compared with background; (2) there is a confounding process; and (3) gland differentiation is altered. PAX2 can be of assistance in delimiting EIN lesions.

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Charles M. Quick

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Christopher P. Crum

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Alain C. Mita

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Allen S. Ho

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Marisa R. Nucci

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Mourad Tighiouart

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Ravi Prasad

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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