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Obstetrics & Gynecology 1996;87:520-526
© 1996 by The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
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Articles

Immunoglobulin-containing plasma cells recruited to cervical neoplasia

RP Edwards, A Pitts, P Crowley-Nowick, EE Partridge, H Gore, and J Mestecky

OBJECTIVE: To determine the number and isotype of immunoglobulin (Ig)-containing cells that infiltrate various stages of cervical neoplasia from no lesion to invasive cancer. METHODS: By three-color immunofluorescent microscopy, the number and isotype of stromal plasma cells were determined for 91 specimens representing a spectrum of cervical epithelial neoplasia as follows: no lesion (n = 12), koilocytic atypia (n = 13), mild dysplasia (n = 21), high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (SIL; n = 22), and invasive carcinoma (n = 23). RESULTS: The Ig-positive cell counts were markedly increased under the low-grade SIL. Specifically, the mean number of IgG-positive plasma cells was significantly increased (P < .003) under the subepithelial stroma of mild dysplasia as compared with no SIL, high-grade SIL, or invasive carcinoma. These immunocyte infiltrates were clustered in the stroma beneath koilocytes, which also demonstrated IgG-positive intracellular staining. CONCLUSION: Low-grade cervical lesions are infiltrated by IgG plasma cells to a greater extent than high-grade or invasive cervical lesions, suggesting that antibody responses are preferentially recruited in early cervical neoplasia, giving credence to the concept that low-grade lesions represent a human papillomavirus infection of the cervix rather than a neoplastic condition.


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J. Immunol.Home page
H. H. Donze, J. E. Cummins Jr., R. S. Schwiebert, P. N. Fultz, S. Jackson, and J. Mestecky
Human and Nonhuman Primate Lymphocytes Engrafted into SCID Mice Reside in Unique Mesenteric Lymphoid Structures
J. Immunol., August 1, 1998; 161(3): 1306 - 1312.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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