Proca D M, Niemann T H, Porcell A I, DeYoung B R
Department of Pathology, Ohio State University Medical Center, Columbus 43210, USA.
Appl Immunohistochem Mol Morphol. 2000 Jun;8(2):120-5. doi: 10.1097/00129039-200006000-00006.
Differentiating between primary tumors of the liver and metastatic lesions can, at times, be difficult. Various histochemical and immunohistochemical methods have been used in an effort to better delineate between hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), especially the microglandular variant, primary cholangiocarcinoma, and metastatic adenocarcinoma; these ancillary studies can yield less than satisfactory results. Recently, anti-MOC31, a monoclonal antibody directed against a cell surface glycoprotein, has been shown to be helpful in distinguishing between adenocarcinoma and mesothelioma. This study addresses whether this antibody might be helpful in distinguishing between HCC, primary cholangiocarcinoma, and metastatic adenocarcinoma in the liver. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections from 15 HCC (including 10 microglandular variants), 14 primary cholangiocarcinomas, and 33 metastatic adenocarcinomas (7 colon, 1 lung, 8 breast, 4 GE jct/gastric, 9 pancreas, 2 small intestine, 1 renal, 1 ovary) were immunostained with anti-MOC 31 (1:40, Dako) after protease digestion and biotin block using a modified ABC technique. Positive staining was limited to membrane based reactivity; controls stained appropriately. Immunoreactivity for MOC31 was observed in 14 of 14 cholangiocarcinomas and 33 of 33 metastatic tumors. Staining was diffuse, intense, and readily interpretable, with rare exceptions. All 15 cases of HCC were negative. We conclude that cholangiocarcinoma and metastatic adenocarcinoma from a variety of sites express MOC31; HCC is uniformly negative for this marker. Anti-MOC31 may prove useful in the evaluation of liver neoplasms where primary hepatocellular and adenocarcinoma enter the differential diagnosis; it is not useful in separating primary cholangiocarcinoma from metastatic adenocarcinoma.
区分肝脏原发性肿瘤和转移性病变有时可能会很困难。为了更好地鉴别肝细胞癌(HCC),尤其是微腺管型变体、原发性胆管癌和转移性腺癌,人们采用了各种组织化学和免疫组织化学方法;然而这些辅助检查的结果并不尽如人意。最近,抗MOC31(一种针对细胞表面糖蛋白的单克隆抗体)已被证明有助于区分腺癌和间皮瘤。本研究探讨了该抗体是否有助于鉴别肝脏中的HCC、原发性胆管癌和转移性腺癌。对15例HCC(包括10例微腺管型变体)、14例原发性胆管癌和33例转移性腺癌(7例来自结肠、1例来自肺、8例来自乳腺、4例来自胃食管交界处/胃、9例来自胰腺、2例来自小肠、1例来自肾、1例来自卵巢)的福尔马林固定、石蜡包埋组织切片,在蛋白酶消化和生物素封闭后,采用改良ABC技术用抗MOC 31(1:40,Dako)进行免疫染色。阳性染色仅限于基于膜的反应性;对照染色正常。14例胆管癌中的14例以及33例转移性肿瘤中的33例观察到MOC31免疫反应性。染色弥漫、强烈且易于解读,仅有极少数例外。15例HCC均为阴性。我们得出结论,胆管癌和来自各种部位的转移性腺癌表达MOC31;HCC对此标志物始终呈阴性。抗MOC31在评估原发性肝细胞癌和腺癌需进行鉴别诊断的肝脏肿瘤时可能有用;但在区分原发性胆管癌和转移性腺癌方面并无帮助。