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Dive into the research topics where Eva Karamitopoulou is active.

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Featured researches published by Eva Karamitopoulou.


Acta Neuropathologica | 1994

Ki-67 immunoreactivity in human central nervous system tumors: a study with MIB 1 monoclonal antibody on archival material

Eva Karamitopoulou; Elias Perentes; Ioannis Diamantis; Theodore Maraziotis

Paraffin-embedded surgical specimens from 136 primary human central nervous system (CNS) tumors, including 50 meningiomas, 24 astrocytomas, 26 anaplastic astrocytomas, 9 glioblastomas, 8 oligoden-drogliomas, 4 ependymomas, 1 anaplastic ependymoma, 2 subependymomas, 9 medulloblastomas, and 3 paragangliomas, were immunostained, following microwave processing, using a streptavidin/peroxidase method and the MIB 1 monoclonal antibody (mAb) against the Ki-67 antigen. The following mean Ki-67 labeling index (LI) values ± SD were found: meningiomas, 2.47 ± 1.83; astrocytomas, 2.03 ± 2.03; anaplastic astrocytomas, 12.80 ± 6.29; glioblastomas, 14.57 ± 6.77; oligodendrogliomas, 5.06 ± 4.78; ependymomas, 2.63 ± 2.58; anaplastic ependymoma, 6.89; subependymomas, 1.79 ± 1.54; medulloblastomas, 18.77 ± 9.65; and paragangliomas, 2.19 ± 2.51. Our findings indicate that while malignant CNS tumors always exhibited high Ki-67 LI values, and benign CNS tumors generally displayed lower values, increased immunoreactivity for Ki-67 epitopes (Ki-67 LI higher than 4) was noted in a number of meningiomas, astrocytomas, ependymomas, oligodendrogliomas and paragangliomas, contrasting with their benign histological features. Further investigations of the Ki-67 immunoreactivity in CNS tumors and systematic correlation with the postoperative follow-up of patients are necessary to determine the value of Ki-67 LI in predicting the biological behavior of CNS neoplasms.


British Journal of Cancer | 2012

Tumour budding: a promising parameter in colorectal cancer

Alessandro Lugli; Eva Karamitopoulou; Inti Zlobec

In 2011, the Tumour Node Metastasis (TNM) staging system still remains the gold standard for stratifying colorectal cancer (CRC) patients into prognostic subgroups, and is considered a solid basis for treatment management. Nevertheless, there is still a challenge with regard to therapeutic strategy; stage II patients are not typically selected for postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy, although some stage II patients have a comparable outcome to stage III patients who, themselves do receive such treatment. Consequently, there has been an inundation of ‘prognostic biomarker’ studies aiming to improve the prognostic stratification power of the TNM staging system. Most proposed biomarkers are not implemented because of lack of reproducibility, validation and standardisation. This problem can be partially resolved by following the REMARK guidelines. In search of novel prognostic factors for patients with CRC, one might glance at a table in the book entitled ‘Prognostic Factors in Cancer’ published by the International Union against Cancer (UICC) in 2006, in which TNM stage, L and V classifications are considered ‘essential’ prognostic factors, whereas tumour grade, perineural invasion, tumour budding and tumour-border configuration among others are proposed as ‘additional’ prognostic factors. Histopathology reports normally include the ‘essential’ features and are accompanied by tumour grade, histological subtype and information on perineural invasion, but interestingly, the tumour-border configuration (i.e., growth pattern) and especially tumour budding are rarely reported. Although scoring systems such as the ‘BRE’ in breast and ‘Gleason’ in prostate cancer are solidly based on histomorphological features and used in daily practice, no such additional scoring system to complement TNM staging is available for CRC. Regardless of differences in study design and methods for tumour-budding assessment, the prognostic power of tumour budding has been confirmed by dozens of study groups worldwide, suggesting that tumour budding may be a valuable candidate for inclusion into a future prognostic scoring system for CRC. This mini-review therefore attempts to present a short and concise overview on tumour budding, including morphological, molecular and prognostic aspects underlining its inter-disciplinary relevance.


British Journal of Cancer | 2009

CD8+ lymphocytes/ tumour-budding index: an independent prognostic factor representing a 'pro-/anti-tumour' approach to tumour host interaction in colorectal cancer.

Alessandro Lugli; Eva Karamitopoulou; I Panayiotides; P Karakitsos; G Rallis; G Peros; G Iezzi; Giulio C. Spagnoli; M Bihl; Luigi Terracciano; Inti Zlobec

Background:The tumour-host interaction at the invasive front of colorectal cancer, including the epithelial–mesenchymal transition and its hallmark ‘tumour budding’, is an important area of investigation in terms of prognosis. The aim of this study was to determine the prognostic impact of a ‘pro-/anti-tumour’ approach defined by an established ‘pro-tumour’ (tumour budding) and host-related ‘anti-tumour’ factor of the adaptive immunological microenvironment (CD8+ lymphocytes).Methods:Double immunostaining for CK22/CD8 on whole tissue sections (n=279; Cohort 1) and immunohistochemistry for CD8+ using tissue microarrays (n=191; Cohort 2) was carried out. Tumour buds, CD8+ and CD8+ T-lymphocytes : tumour buds indices were evaluated per high-power field.Results:In Cohort 1, a low-CD8+/ buds index was associated with lymph node metastasis (P<0.001), vascular invasion (P=0.009), worse survival in univariate (P<0.001) and multivariable (P<0.001) analysis, and furthermore in lymph node-negative patients (P=0.002). In Cohort 2, the CD8+/ buds index was associated with T stage (P<0.001), N stage (P=0.041), vascular invasion (P=0.005) and survival in patients with TNM stage II (P=0.019), stage III (P=0.004), and adjuvantly untreated (P=0.009) and treated patients (P<0.001).Conclusion:The CD8+ lymphocyte : tumour-budding index is an independent prognostic factor in colorectal cancer and a promising approach for a future prognostic score for patients with this disease.


Human Pathology | 2013

Tumor budding score based on 10 high-power fields is a promising basis for a standardized prognostic scoring system in stage II colorectal cancer

Milo Horcic; Viktor H. Koelzer; Eva Karamitopoulou; Luigi Terracciano; Giacomo Puppa; Inti Zlobec; Alessandro Lugli

Tumor budding is recognized by the World Health Organization as an additional prognostic factor in colorectal cancer but remains unreported in diagnostic work due to the absence of a standardized scoring method. This study aims to assess the most prognostic and reproducible scoring systems for tumor budding in colorectal cancer. Tumor budding on pancytokeratin-stained whole tissue sections from 105 well-characterized stage II patients was scored by 3 observers using 7 methods: Hase, Nakamura, Ueno, Wang (conventional and rapid method), densest high-power field, and 10 densest high-power fields. The predictive value for clinicopathologic features, the prognostic significance, and interobserver variability of each scoring method was analyzed. Pancytokeratin staining allowed accurate evaluation of tumor buds. Interobserver agreement for 3 observers was excellent for densest high-power field (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.83) and 10 densest high-power fields (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.91). Agreement was moderate to substantial for the conventional Wang method (κ = 0.46-0.62) and moderate for the rapid method (κ = 0.46-0.58). For Nakamura, moderate agreement (κ = 0.41-0.52) was reached, whereas concordance was fair to moderate for Ueno (κ = 0.39-0.56) and Hase (κ = 0.29-0.51). The Hase, Ueno, densest high-power field, and 10 densest high-power field methods identified a significant association of tumor budding with tumor border configuration. In multivariate analysis, only tumor budding as evaluated in densest high-power field and 10 densest high-power fields had significant prognostic effects on patient survival (P < .01), with high prognostic accuracy over the full 10-year follow-up. Scoring tumor buds in 10 densest high-power fields is a promising method to identify stage II patients at high risk for recurrence in daily diagnostics; it is highly reproducible, accounts for heterogeneity, and has a strong predictive value for adverse outcome.


International Journal of Cancer | 2011

Tumor infiltration by FcγRIII (CD16)+ myeloid cells is associated with improved survival in patients with colorectal carcinoma

Giuseppe Sconocchia; Inti Zlobec; Alessandro Lugli; Diego Calabrese; Giandomenica Iezzi; Eva Karamitopoulou; Efstratios Patsouris; George Peros; Milo Horcic; Luigi Tornillo; Markus Zuber; Raoul A. Droeser; Manuele Giuseppe Muraro; Chantal Mengus; Daniel Oertli; Soldano Ferrone; Luigi Terracciano; Giulio C. Spagnoli

The prognostic significance of macrophage and natural killer (NK) cell infiltration in colorectal carcinoma (CRC) microenvironment is unclear. We investigated the CRC innate inflammatory infiltrate in over 1,600 CRC using two independent tissue microarrays and immunohistochemistry. Survival time was assessed using the Kaplan–Meier method and Cox proportional hazards regression analysis in a multivariable setting. Spearmans rank correlation tested the association between macrophage and lymphocyte infiltration. The Basel study included over 1,400 CRCs. The level of CD16+ cell infiltration correlated with that of CD3+ and CD8+ lymphocytes but not with NK cell infiltration. Patients with high CD16+ cell infiltration (score 2) survived longer than patients with low (score 1) infiltration (p = 0.008), while no survival difference between patients with score 1 or 2 for CD56+ (p = 0.264) or CD57+ cell (p = 0.583) infiltration was detected. CD16+ infiltrate was associated with improved survival even after adjusting for known prognostic factors including pT, pN, grade, vascular invasion, tumor growth and age [(p = 0.001: HR (95% CI) = 0.71 (0.6–0.9)]. These effects were independent from CD8+ lymphocyte infiltration [(p = 0.036: HR (95% CI) = 0.81 (0.7–0.9)] and presence of metastases [(p = 0.002: HR (95% CI) = 0.43 (0.3–0.7)]. Phenotypic studies identified CD16+ as CD45+CD33+CD11b+CD11c+ but CD64− HLA‐DR‐myeloid cells. Beneficial effects of CD16+ cell infiltration were independently validated by a study carried out at the University of Athens confirming that patients with CD16 score 2 survived longer than patients with score 1 CRCs (p = 0.011). Thus, CD16+ cell infiltration represents a novel favorable prognostic factor in CRC.


Acta Neuropathologica | 1993

p53 protein expression in central nervous system tumors : an immunohistochemical study with CM1 polyvalent and DO-7 monoclonal antibodies

Eva Karamitopoulou; Elias Perentes; Ioannis Diamantis

SummaryFormalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded surgical specimens from 137 primary central nervous system tumors, including 26 astrocytomas (21 fibrillary, 1 protoplasmic, 1 gemistocytic and 3 pilocytic), 26 anaplastic astrocytomas, 9 glioblastomas, 1 gliosarcoma, 8 oligodendrogliomas, 4 ependymomas, 1 anaplastic ependymoma, 2 subependymomas, 3 paragangliomas, and 57 meningiomas, were immunostained with the CM1 polyclonal (pAb) and the DO-7 monoclonal (mAb) antibodies against the p53 protein, using the streptavidin/peroxidase method. In addition, two series of 17 and 9 medulloblastomas were also immunostained with the above pAb and mAb, respectively. p53 protein expression was observed in 7 fibrillary astrocytomas, 17 anaplastic astrocytomas, 5 glioblastomas, 1 gliosarcoma, 1 oligodendroglioma, 1 anaplastic ependymoma, and 4 meningiomas with the CM1 pAb. An additional 10 cases (i.e., 3 anaplastic astrocytomas and 7 meningiomas) were found to be p53 protein positive with the DO-7 mAb. Of the medulloblastomas, 8 (of the 17) and 4 (of the 9) were found to express p53 protein with CM1 pAb and DO-7 mAb, respectively. Our results indicate that p53 protein is expressed in a number of central nervous system neoplasms, and suggest that in astrocytic tumors a possible association may exist between p53 protein expression and tumor progression through increasing histological grades of malignancy.


European Journal of Cancer | 2010

Loss of the CBX7 protein expression correlates with a more aggressive phenotype in pancreatic cancer.

Eva Karamitopoulou; Pierlorenzo Pallante; Inti Zlobec; Luigi Tornillo; Vincenza Carafa; Thomas Schaffner; Markus Borner; Ioannis Diamantis; Thomas Brunner; Arthur Zimmermann; Antonella Federico; Luigi Terracciano; Alfredo Fusco

Polycomb group (PcG) proteins function as multiprotein complexes and are part of a gene regulatory mechanism that determines cell fate during normal and pathogenic development. Several studies have implicated the deregulation of different PcG proteins in neoplastic progression. Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma is an aggressive neoplasm that follows a multistep model of progression through precursor lesions called pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PanIN). Aim of this study was to investigate the role of PcG protein CBX7 in pancreatic carcinogenesis and to evaluate its possible diagnostic and prognostic significance. We analysed by immunohistochemistry the expression of CBX7 in 210 ductal pancreatic adenocarcinomas from resection specimens, combined on a tissue microarray (TMA) including additional 40 PanIN cases and 40 normal controls. The results were evaluated by using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis for the selection of cut-off scores and correlated to the clinicopathological parameters of the tumours and the outcome of the patients. Expression of E-cadherin, a protein positively regulated by CBX7, was also assessed. A significantly differential, and progressively decreasing CBX7 protein expression was found between normal pancreatic tissue, PanINs and invasive ductal adenocarcinoma. Loss of CBX7 expression was associated with increasing malignancy grade in pancreatic adenocarcinoma, whereas the maintenance of CBX7 expression showed a trend toward a longer survival. Moreover, loss of E-cadherin expression was associated with loss of CBX7 and with a trend towards worse patient survival. These results suggest that CBX7 plays a role in pancreatic carcinogenesis and that its loss of expression correlates to a more aggressive phenotype.


Histopathology | 2012

HMGA1 and HMGA2 protein expression correlates with advanced tumour grade and lymph node metastasis in pancreatic adenocarcinoma

Salvatore Piscuoglio; Inti Zlobec; Pierlorenzo Pallante; Romina Sepe; Arthur Zimmermann; Ioannis Diamantis; Luigi Terracciano; Alfredo Fusco; Eva Karamitopoulou

Piscuoglio S, Zlobec I, Pallante P, Sepe R, Esposito F, Zimmermann A, Diamantis I, Terracciano L, Fusco A & Karamitopoulou E 
(2012) Histopathology 60, 397–404 
HMGA1 and HMGA2 protein expression correlates with advanced tumour grade and lymph node metastasis in pancreatic adenocarcinoma


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2008

Clinical significance of cell cycle- and apoptosis-related markers in biliary tract cancer: a tissue microarray-based approach revealing a distinctive immunophenotype for intrahepatic and extrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas.

Eva Karamitopoulou; Luigi Tornillo; Inti Zlobec; Lukas Cioccari; Vincenza Carafa; Markus Borner; Thomas Schaffner; Thomas Brunner; Ioannis Diamantis; A. Zimmermann; Luigi Terracciano

Cholangiocarcinoma is the second most common malignant tumor of the liver. We analyzed, immunohistochemically, the significance of cell cycle- and apoptosis-related markers in 128 cholangiocarcinomas (42 intrahepatic, 70 extrahepatic, and 16 gallbladder carcinomas) combined in a tissue microarray. Follow-up was available for 57 patients (44.5%). In comparison with normal tissue (29 specimens), cholangiocarcinomas expressed significantly more frequently p53, bcl-2, bax, and COX-2 (P.05 <). Intrahepatic tumors were significantly more frequently bcl-2+ and p16+, whereas extrahepatic tumors were more often p53+ (P < .05). Loss of p16 expression was associated with reduced survival of patients. Our data show that p53, bcl-2, bax, and COX-2 have an important role in the pathogenesis of cholangiocarcinomas. The differential expression of p16, bcl-2, and p53 between intrahepatic and extrahepatic tumors demonstrates that there are location-related differences in the phenotype and the genetic profiles of these tumors. Moreover, p16 was identified as an important prognostic marker in cholangiocarcinomas.


Immunity | 2013

Neonatal Fc Receptor Expression in Dendritic Cells Mediates Protective Immunity against Colorectal Cancer

Kristi Baker; Timo Rath; Magdalena B. Flak; Janelle C. Arthur; Zhangguo Chen; Jonathan N. Glickman; Inti Zlobec; Eva Karamitopoulou; Matthew D. Stachler; Robert D. Odze; Wayne I. Lencer; Christian Jobin; Richard S. Blumberg

Cancers arising in mucosal tissues account for a disproportionately large fraction of malignancies. Immunoglobulin G (IgG) and the neonatal Fc receptor for IgG (FcRn) have an important function in the mucosal immune system that we have now shown extends to the induction of CD8(+) T cell-mediated antitumor immunity. We demonstrate that FcRn within dendritic cells (DCs) was critical for homeostatic activation of mucosal CD8(+) T cells that drove protection against the development of colorectal cancers and lung metastases. FcRn-mediated tumor protection was driven by DCs activation of endogenous tumor-reactive CD8(+) T cells via the cross-presentation of IgG complexed antigens (IgG IC), as well as the induction of cytotoxicity-promoting cytokine secretion, particularly interleukin-12, both of which were independently triggered by the FcRn-IgG IC interaction in murine and human DCs. FcRn thus has a primary role within mucosal tissues in activating local immune responses that are critical for priming efficient anti-tumor immunosurveillance.

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George Peros

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Efstratios Patsouris

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Ioannis Diamantis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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