Indinnimeo Marileda, Cicchini Claudia, Memeo Lorenzo, Stazi Alessandro, Provenza Claudia, Ricci Francesca, Mingazzini Pietro Luigi
Department of Surgery Pietro Valdoni, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy.
Anticancer Res. 2002 Jan-Feb;22(1A):395-8.
The possible association between neuroendocrine pattern and cancer prognosis could have substantial clinical implications, but the studies performed have generated conflicting results. As chromogranin-A (CGA) and dense-core granules are expressed concordantly, CGA expression may be used as a marker for cells expressing the complete neuroendocrine cell phenotype.
Fifty-six patients with primary colon carcinoma who underwent potentially curative surgery were analyzed. For immunohistochemical study a monoclonal antibody specific for human chromogranin A was used. The tumor was considered positive when the number of CGA cells was higher than 10% in the section. The relation between CGA-positivity and depth of parietal invasion, lymph-node status and differentiation grade was examined.
We observed positive immunostaining in 22 cases out of 56 (39.3%). Significant association was found between CGA-positivity and lymph-node metastasis.
CGA overexpression could reflect a more aggressive tumor. If our results are confirmed, we should consider the CGA + colon cancer patients at risk for lymph-node disease and therefore include them in a adjuvant chemotherapeutic protocol.