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Imaging, Diagnosis, Prognosis |
Authors' Affiliations: Departments of 1 Pathology, 2 Medical Statistics, and 3 Surgery, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands; 4 Department of Surgery, IJsselland Hospital, Capelle a/d IJssel, the Netherlands; 5 Department of Surgery, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; and 6 Department of Surgery, Reinier de Graaf Gasthuis, Delft, the Netherlands
Requests for reprints: Hans Morreau, Department of Pathology L1-Q, Leiden University Medical Center, P. O. Box 9600, 2300 RC Leiden, the Netherlands. Phone: 31-71-526-6630; Fax: 31-71-524-8158; E-mail: J.Morreau{at}lumc.nl.
| Abstract |
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Experimental Design: We analyzed 36 formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumors. Both the adenoma and carcinoma fractions were typed with single nucleotide polymorphism arrays and compared with 21 previously described pure adenomas. Eighteen cases were included in an intratumor heterogeneity analysis.
Results: Five specific "malignant" events (gain of 8q, 13q, and 20q and loss of 17p and 18q) and aberrant staining for p53 and SMAD4 were all increased in the adenoma fractions of carcinoma cases compared with pure adenomas. Paired analysis revealed that 31% of the samples had an equal amount of malignant aberrations in their adenoma and carcinoma fractions, whereas 25% had one and 33% had two or more extra malignant events in the carcinoma fraction. Analysis of three core biopsies per patient showed a large degree of intratumor heterogeneity. However, the number of malignant aberrations in the biopsy with the most aberrations per tumor correlated with the corresponding adenoma or carcinoma fraction (r = 0.807; P < 0.001).
Conclusion: Five specific chromosomal aberrations, combined with immunohistochemistry for p53 and SMAD4, can predict possible progression of sessile rectal adenomas to early rectal cancer and can, after validation studies, be added to preoperative staging. Preferably, three biopsies should be taken from each tumor to address intratumor heterogeneity.
300,000 new cases per year in Europe and the United States (1). Approximately 25% of these cases are rectal cancers, and the incidence of its benign precursor lesion, adenomas, is far higher. Total mesorectal excision is the gold standard to treat carcinomas (2); transanal endoscopic microsurgery (TEM) is the method of choice to treat sessile adenomas (3, 4). Although it has not yet been proven, T1 rectal carcinomas may be good candidates for TEM without compromising oncological outcome (5–7). On the other hand, an invasive carcinoma (beyond the muscularis mucosae) is found after local excision in a large proportion of presumed benign tumors (5, 8), which shows the need for more precise staging. Several possible imaging techniques have additional value, and endorectal ultrasound seems most promising; however, not all cases are eligible for endorectal ultrasound, and overstaging is a serious problem (9). It should be noted that TEM-treated cases of early rectal cancer mostly consist of adenoma tissue. Thus, there is a need for additional preoperative staging methods that can accurately facilitate therapeutic decision making in the treatment of rectal tumors. Ideally, a combination of methods should be able to reliably discern benign adenomas from adenomas containing a carcinoma focus as well as predict lymph node metastasis. Chromosomal instability is the main characteristic of many different tumor types, including rectal cancer. To date, many studies have been done in colorectal cancer to assess chromosomal gains, losses, or loss of heterozygosity (LOH). Commonly involved regions in (colo)rectal cancer are 5q, 8, 13q, 17p, 18q, and 20q, as established by different groups (10–14). Other studies specifically analyzed rectal cancer precursor lesions (15–18) and found that commonly involved chromosomal aberrations are already frequent in adenomas or are correlated with high-grade dysplasia. Several studies identified intratumor heterogeneity, which is characterized by patterns of different chromosomal aberrations in different tumor areas of the same lesion (19, 20).
In a previous study, we used single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays to detect copy number aberrations and LOH in rectal adenomas and carcinomas at different clinical stages (12). Considering the frequent malignant events, gain of 8q, 13q, and 20q, and loss of 17p and 18q, we have built a rectal cancer progression model. In addition, we found that (combinations of) these "malignant" events were increasingly found in adenoma fractions of carcinoma cases in comparison with pure adenomas. We now did a systematic comparison of chromosomal instability patterns in adenoma and carcinoma fractions in the same lesion of early rectal cancer cases that were treated by TEM. The effect of intratumor heterogeneity in a partly overlapping set of tumors was assessed by chromosomal instability analysis of three different ex vivo core biopsies per tumor, which were taken postoperatively.
| Materials and Methods |
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For intratumor heterogeneity analysis, three core biopsies were taken postoperatively, ex vivo, from 13 of the carcinoma cases and 5 of the pure adenoma cases at the surface of the tumor. These biopsies were randomly taken and snap frozen in liquid nitrogen. Biopsies contained either adenoma or carcinoma tissue.
The local medical ethical committee approved the study (protocol number P04.124). Table 1 shows all sample characteristics.
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DNA from the frozen tumor biopsies was extracted as previously described (12) using the Genomic Wizard kit.
All DNA concentrations were measured with the PicoGreen method (Invitrogen-Molecular Probes), and DNA quality was checked on a 1% agarose gel.
Array analysis. The use of SNP arrays is a well-established method for copy number and LOH analysis. Therefore, data were not validated with cytogenetics in the present study. Validation studies are well documented by us and others (22–24).
For each cell isolate, 1 µg DNA was used for the BeadArrays. Illumina BeadArrays, in combination with the linkage mapping panel version 4_v3 or version 4_v4B (Illumina), were used and respectively contained 5,861 or 6,008 SNP markers distributed evenly over the genome with an average physical distance of 482 kb. Samples were prepared according to the GoldenGate assay (25). Gene calls were extracted using the gene calling programs GeneCall and GTS Reports (Illumina).
Copy number and LOH analysis. Copy numbers were determined based on intensity of the individual SNPs (23). LOH was analyzed by comparing the genotypes from paired normal and tumor DNA. Analyses were done using the R-package beadarraySNP. In addition, chromosome visualization of LOH was done in Spotfire DecisionSite (26). LOH was calculated as described.7 Briefly, LOH was computed from the gene call score and the gene train score output of GeneCall and GTS Reports (Illumina). LOH was called for high-quality heterozygous SNPs in the normal tissue (gene call score/gene train score ratio, >0.8) that were, in the paired tumor, homozygous or showed a gene call score/gene train score ratio of <0.8. Only LOH at a stretch of two or more SNPs was scored (26). When both physical loss and LOH were detected at a specific region, the LOH detected is an additional indication of physical loss. In the case where no copy number change was detected, LOH was interpreted as copy neutral LOH.
APC and KRAS mutation screening. APC and KRAS mutation detection were done as described (27).8 PCR product (5-10 ng) was sequenced with 6 pmol of M13 forward or reverse primer on an ABI 3700 DNA Analyzer using BigDye Terminator Chemistry (Applied Biosystems). Sequences were analyzed with Mutation Surveyor DNA variant analysis software (version 2.61; Softgenetics).
p53 and SMAD4 immunohistochemical analysis. Triplicate tissue cores from tumor areas, selected by a pathologist (H.M.) based on H&E-stained slides, were taken from each specimen (Beecher Instruments). These punches, which had a diameter of 0.6 mm, were arrayed on a recipient paraffin wax block using standard procedures (28, 29). A paraffin sectioning aid system (Instrumedics, Inc.) was used to facilitate cutting 5-µm sections of the tissue microarray. After antigen retrieval [microwave oven treatment for 10 min in 10 mmol/L citrate buffer, pH 6.0 (p53), or Tris-EDTA, pH 8.0 (SMAD4)], endogenous peroxidases were inactivated by 1% H2O2/PBS. Sections were incubated overnight at room temperature with mouse anti-human monoclonal antibodies directed against p53 (clone D0-7, 1:1,000 dilution; NeoMarkers) or SMAD4 (clone B-8, 1:100 dilution; Santa Cruz Biotechnology). The sections were then incubated and stained with a biotinylated secondary antibody in PBS/bovine serum albumin 1% (p53) or Envision HRP-ChemMate kit (SMAD4; DAKO). Diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride was used as a chromogen for p53 staining. The slides were counterstained with hematoxylin. p53 was scored in four different categories based on any level of nuclear staining: 1% to 25% positive nuclei (indicative for a wild-type status), 25% to 75% positive nuclei, >75% positive nuclei (the latter two mostly indicative for a mutation), or completely negative (uninformative). SMAD4 was scored in the following categories: no nuclear staining with a positive internal control (total loss), weak nuclear staining (down-regulation), and moderate to strong nuclear staining (positive).
Statistics. Student's t test was used to compare means of continuous variables between two groups.
2 tests were done to test significance between groups for specific loss and gain events. Physical loss and copy neutral LOH were considered as identical events in these analyses. Correlations between two tumor fractions were computed using Pearson's correlation coefficients. For all analyses, P values of <0.05 were considered as significant. All these analyses were done using Statistical Package for the Social Sciences 12 (SPSS).
| Results |
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With the aim of studying the early aberrations already present in the adenoma fraction of carcinoma cases, we assessed copy number alterations and LOH in paired adenoma (A/C) and carcinoma (C/C) formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues of 36 TEM-treated rectal carcinomas. In two cases, two different adenoma fractions were identified, and for four cases, the carcinoma fraction was too small to be analyzed; therefore, both the adenoma fraction with low- and high-grade dysplasia were analyzed, finally leading to a total number of 32 C/C fractions and 42 A/C fractions. Table 2 shows the most frequent chromosomal changes per sample group; in Supplementary Table S1, all genomic and genetic abnormalities are shown for each case. The A/C and C/C fractions were compared with each other and with the pure adenomas (A/A) from the previous study (12). From that study, we learned that only specific adenoma events (loss of 1p36, 4q32-pter, and 5q and gain of 7p15-11 and 12q13) were frequently involved in the A/A cases. In the current study, we observed that the carcinoma or malignant events were all significantly different between the C/C and A/A groups (Table 2). Three of the five events were also significantly different between the A/C and A/A groups (13q gain, 20q gain, and 18q12-22 loss) and between the C/C and A/C groups (8q22-24 gain, 13q gain, and 18q12-22 loss). In addition, 13q gain combined with 18q loss was significantly different between the groups. Moreover, additional carcinoma progression events were identified in this study: loss of 8p, 14q, and 15q and gain of 19q were all increased in carcinoma fractions (C/C) in comparison with their adenoma counterparts (A/C).
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In the pure adenomas, we observed high percentages of APC and KRAS mutations (61% and 53%, respectively), comparable with frequencies in the A/C (62% and 67%) and C/C tumor fractions (50% and 46%; Table 2). For APC, we examined whether patients with 5q retention had other types of APC mutations compared with cases with 5q LOH/loss. In the cases with 5q LOH/loss, we observed that 64% had an APC mutation, whereas cases with 5q retention showed a frequency of 52% (not significant). There was no difference in the type of mutation and, consequently, in the amount of remaining β-catenin binding sites among A/A, A/C, and C/C samples. For KRAS, we examined if we could detect any difference in type of mutation. Glycine to valine and glycine to aspartic acid were the most frequent alterations (n = 11 and 13, respectively). However, no difference in type of mutation was observed among A/A, A/C, and C/C samples. The A/C group had the most double mutations; 38% had a mutation in both APC and KRAS compared with 28% for the A/A cases and 16% for the C/C cases. However, this difference was not significant.
p53 and SMAD4 immunohistochemistry. Not many target genes on chromosomes 8q, 13q, 17p, 18q, and 20q have been unequivocally identified. However, the role of p53 on 17p and SMAD4 on 18q has been amply documented in the tumorigenesis of colorectal cancer (32–35). Nevertheless, we cannot rule out completely that other genes are targeted by these chromosomal aberrations as well. Because reliable immunohistochemistry was available, we did p53 and SMAD4 immunohistochemical staining on tissue microarrays and correlated the findings to allelic loss status. Although 17p loss frequency was only significantly different between the A/A and C/C tumors, aberrant p53 staining (25-100% positive nuclei, indicative for a mutation) was significantly increased in the A/C group compared with the A/A group (29% versus 5%, P = 0.022) and in the C/C group compared with both the A/C and A/A groups (63% versus 29%, P = 0.006, and 63% versus 5%, P < 0.001, respectively; Table 2). In addition, significantly more aberrant staining was observed in the A/C group with high-grade dysplasia compared with low-grade dysplasia (46% versus 0%, P = 0.001). Aberrant p53 staining was correlated with 17p loss (P < 0.001). For SMAD4, we assessed both the percentage of down-regulation and complete loss of protein expression. Down-regulation of SMAD4 as well as complete loss of SMAD4 were both significantly increased in the A/C cases when compared with the A/A cases (74% versus 48%, P = 0.04, and 18% versus 0%, P = 0.011, respectively), and complete loss of SMAD4 was different between C/C and A/A cases (41% versus 0%, P < 0.001; Table 2). Both down-regulation and complete loss of SMAD4 expression were correlated with 18q loss (P = 0.018 and 0.011, respectively).
Association of chromosomal aberrations to clinicopathologic features. We investigated whether several clinicopathologic markers were associated with chromosomal aberrations. The malignant tumors were significantly smaller than the pure adenomas (mean diameter, 4.6 versus 6.3 cm; P = 0.032); however, the total number of aberrations, or the amount of the five malignant aberrations, did not correlate with tumor size. Furthermore, samples from different T stages were compared. We compared 10 T2 carcinomas with 25 T1 carcinomas. No significant differences were observed between these groups in total chromosomal instability or malignant aberrations. Nine cases with local recurrences were compared with those without recurrences. However, no significant differences were observed. Three samples had lymph node metastasis, but this number was too small to make any comparisons.
Systematic comparison of adenoma and carcinoma tissue in the same lesion. Figure 1 shows a systematic comparison between the adenoma and carcinoma fraction of single cases for all genomic aberrations. Most data points are slightly above the x = y line, indicating that carcinoma fractions have slightly more aberrations than the corresponding adenoma fractions. Correlation coefficients between adenoma and carcinoma fractions were 0.229 (P = 0.180) and 0.516 (P = 0.001) for the total number of aberrations and the five malignant aberrations, respectively. The adenoma fractions with low-grade dysplasia showed fewer aberrations than the adenoma fractions with high-grade dysplasia; however, this difference was not significant. Four carcinoma fractions (11%) showed the same number of aberrations as their corresponding adenoma fraction, whereas 47% showed one to five extra events and 28% showed more than five extra events in the carcinoma fraction (Fig. 1A). For five cases (14%), the adenoma fraction contained more aberrations than its corresponding carcinoma fraction.
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Table 3 shows the distribution of the genomic changes over the chromosomes. As expected, the malignant aberrations were the most common "progression" events, as these had the highest frequency in the carcinoma fractions, whereas the corresponding adenoma fractions did not show this event. 13q and 18q events were especially strongly increased; in 13 and 14 cases, respectively, the carcinoma fraction contained this event in contrast to the adenoma fraction. The other extra events in the carcinoma fractions did not involve specific chromosomes, as the random distribution of events over the chromosomes shows.
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Three different biopsies were postoperatively taken ex vivo from 5 pure adenomas and 13 carcinomas at random positions from the surface of the tumor and analyzed with SNP arrays (Table 1). Figure 2A shows genome-wide chromosomal aberrations in the different biopsies and their corresponding adenoma or carcinoma fraction. Roughly the same pattern of aberrations is seen in the different biopsies and the corresponding tumor fraction of the same patient. The number of malignant aberrations for all three biopsies, and the adenoma and carcinoma fractions per patient, is comparable for most cases (Fig. 2B). In 3 of 18 (17%) tumors (cases 16, 30, and 54), the amount of malignant aberrations differed considerably between the biopsies and the tumor fractions, whereas in the majority of cases (15 of 18, 83%) the biopsies showed one different malignant aberration at most.
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| Discussion |
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The Vogelstein progression model for colorectal tumorigenesis, proposed in 1990 and adapted in the years after, has been addressed by many other studies (20, 36–38). We now seek to use such data for clinical decision making. Our study showed that three of the five malignant events (gain of 13q and 20q and loss of 18q) were already abundant and significantly increased in rectal adenoma fractions of carcinoma cases compared with pure adenomas. The two other malignant events (8q gain and 17p loss) were not significantly changed, but percentages were increased. Furthermore, 17p loss was related to aberrant nuclear staining for p53 using immunohistochemistry, which was significantly different in adenomas with a carcinoma focus versus pure adenomas. Loss of 18q and SMAD4 immunohistochemistry showed an identical relationship. The relative additional amount of chromosomal aberrations in the transition from adenoma to carcinoma was most often equal in cases with a limited amount of adenomatous aberrations to those with a high amount of such events.
Hermsen et al. (15), described seven cancer-associated events (loss of 8p, 15q, 17p, and 18q and gain of 8q, 13q, and 20q) that were associated with both carcinomas and adenoma fractions of carcinomas. In addition, they found that these chromosomal abnormalities occurred in specific combinations of a few abnormalities rather than as a mere accumulation of events. We did not identify a specific combination of events but found that most carcinomas have at least two of the five malignant events. In addition, we identified gain of 19q and loss of 8p, 14q, and 15q as later events in carcinoma progression, as these were increased in the carcinoma fractions (C/C) compared with the adenoma fractions (A/C). These regions are, in part, similar to the results of Diep et al. (11), who reported deletion of 8p and 14q and gain of 1q and 19q as late events that correlated with metastasis in a meta-analysis of 859 colorectal cancers.
SNP array analysis of three different ex vivo core biopsies per tumor showed a large degree of intratumor heterogeneity. Hence, it is essential to analyze several tumor fractions per patient for an accurate assessment of genetic changes. Although intratumor heterogeneity is a well-studied phenomenon in colorectal cancer (19, 20, 39, 40), our study is the first to assess genome-wide heterogeneity through SNP array analysis in a series of rectal tumors. Losi et al. (20) found intratumor heterogeneity in 90% of early colorectal cancers, a percentage that corresponds to our data. In addition, Baisse et al. (40) found heterogeneity in 67% of colorectal cancer. Studies in colorectal and other cancers showed that accumulation of clonal diversity is a fundamental principle in cancer progression (41–43). In our study, less heterogeneity was present when only the five malignant aberrations were tested. Moreover, a good correlation was established between the biopsy with the most aberrations per patient and the corresponding adenoma or carcinoma fraction. In spite of the observed heterogeneity, it seems that three biopsies per tumor can reliably assess the chromosomal aberrations in rectal tumors.
Surprisingly, some adenoma fractions showed more aberrations than their carcinoma counterparts. Likewise, several biopsies contained other or more aberrations than their corresponding tumor fraction. This interesting finding can be explained by different factors. First, tumor heterogeneity might be a reason; the carcinoma fraction of such a case might have arisen from a different tumor clone than the adenoma fraction studied. The fact that four cases showed either APC or KRAS mutations in the adenoma fraction and not in the carcinoma fraction also suggests that the carcinoma did not arise from the adenoma clone. Consistent with our findings, Zauber et al. (44) found a difference between the adenoma and carcinoma portion of tumors with regard to the KRAS gene in 24% of 37 neoplasms. Second, it was frequently observed that a carcinoma fraction had a larger stromal involvement and thus a somewhat lower tumor cell percentage than the adenoma fraction. Although a lower tumor cell percentage might make it more difficult to depict chromosomal aberrations, most aberrations seemed very reproducible. However, with too many contaminating stromal cells, a certain chromosomal aberration might be present in too few cells to be detected by current techniques. Laser capture microdissection might offer a solution for research but is not feasible for a clinical application.
A recent study showed that retention of chromosome 5q correlated with liver metastasis in colorectal cancer (45). The authors found that tumors with 5q deletion (loss or LOH) have a different type of APC mutation than cases with 5q retention. Cases with 5q deletion usually have one APC allele affected by a mutation, usually leaving one or two β-catenin binding sites, whereas cases with retention usually have two different APC mutations (30). This can lead to differences in residual β-catenin activity, which in turn can show an effect on the neoplastic process. We did not detect any significant difference between cases with 5q retention versus 5q LOH/loss regarding APC mutations in the mutation cluster region. However, we analyzed only the mutation cluster region of APC starting at codon 1284. If mutations occurred before the mutation cluster region, this would lead to loss of all β-catenin binding sites in one allele, as is probably the case in the samples with 5q retention.
As a large proportion of presumed sessile rectal adenomas seem to identify postoperatively as carcinomas, there is a need for additional preoperative tests. Most carcinomas in this study were preoperatively classified as adenomas; thus, a TEM was done. In the majority of carcinoma cases, preoperative and ex vivo core biopsies contained adenoma tissue, indicating that it is difficult to obtain a correct preoperative diagnosis using standard histopathology. Interestingly, 15 of 36 (42%) adenoma fractions of carcinoma cases had two or more malignant aberrations, indicative of malignancy. Aberrant p53 and SMAD4 immunohistochemical staining correlated with 17p and 18q loss, respectively, and were both increased in adenoma fractions of carcinomas in contrast to pure adenomas. Such p53 immunohistochemistry showed an even better discrimination between pure adenomas and adenoma fractions of carcinoma cases than 17p loss, indicating that some cases might have two somatic mutations in the p53 gene instead of one mutation combined with chromosomal loss. However, we cannot exclude that other genes might be targeted by the loss. For chromosome 8q, 13q, and 20q gain, the target genes are largely unknown, although a prime target on 8q might be the cMyc gene, for example. BRCA2, Rb, and other tumor suppressor genes locate on chromosome 13q. Although 13q loss is observed in most cancer types, this chromosome usually shows gain in colorectal cancer. Earlier observations indeed showed increased copy numbers of one Rb1 allele and increased levels of Rb mRNA and protein expression in colorectal cancer (46–48). The role of Rb in colorectal cancer development is thus not clear. Currently, we are integrating gene expression analysis with the obtained SNP data to study the effect of chromosomal aberrations on the transcriptional level.
Our ex vivo biopsy analysis showed that the analysis of small biopsies is feasible because the chromosomal aberrations were reliably identified. Additionally, biopsies were taken at the surface of the tumor, just as in the preoperative situation. The five chromosomal regions and immunohistochemistry for p53 and SMAD4 should now be evaluated on a large series of multiple preoperative biopsies. However, reservations may exist to the application of the above approach, given that some adenomas tend to harbor more aberrations than their carcinoma counterparts. After validation studies, these methods can hopefully be added to future histologic analysis and imaging methods, possibly leading to improved rectal tumor staging.
In conclusion, adenoma fractions of rectal carcinoma cases show a high degree of chromosomal instability and have a relatively small increase in genomic alterations in their transition to carcinomas. The occurrence of specific chromosomal events could possibly be used to predict the malignant behavior of sessile rectal adenomas. The analysis of several biopsies per patient revealed a large degree of intratumor heterogeneity, but when three biopsies per tumor are analyzed, most aberrations are reliably identified.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Clinical Cancer Research Online (http://clincancerres.aacrjournals.org/).
7 T. van Wezel et al. Genotyping and LOH analysis on archival tissue using SNP arrays, In: M. Starkey and R. Elaswarapu, Genomics - method express. Bioxham: Scion Publishing. in press. ![]()
8 M. van Puijenbroek et al. Identification of (atypical) MAP patients by KRAS2 c.34 G>T prescreening followed by MUTYH hotspot analysis in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue. Clin Can Res. In press. ![]()
Received 8/21/07; revised 10/ 2/07; accepted 10/11/07.
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