Okada Ken-Ichi, Hirabayashi Kenichi, Imaizumi Toshihide, Matsuyama Masahiro, Yazawa Naoki, Dowaki Shoichi, Tobita Kosuke, Ohtani Yasuo, Tanaka Makiko, Inokuchi Sadaki, Makuuchi Hiroyasu
Department of Surgery, Tokai University School of Medicine, Isehara, Kanagawa, Japan.
Biomed Res. 2010 Feb;31(1):13-9. doi: 10.2220/biomedres.31.13.
The invasion of intraductal papillary-mucinous neoplasm (IPMN) is sometimes difficult to diagnose using only ordinary hematoxylin-eosin sections. The aim of this study was to evaluate the invasion of IPMN more precisely using thrombospondin-1 (TSP1) immunohistochemistry as a useful adjunct to morphological examination. Eighty patients that underwent primary resection for pancreatic IPMNs were retrospectively analyzed. The 80 IPMNs were studied for the expression of TSP1, MUC1-CORE, MUC2, and MUC5AC. The cases were evaluated for dysplasia, the presence of invasion, hisological subtypes, and survival. The 80 IPMNs were classified into 29 intraductal papillary-mucinous adenomas (IPMAs), 10 borderline IPMNs, 18 noninvasive intraductal papillary-mucinous carcinomas (IPMCs), and 23 invasive IPMCs according to the WHO classification. Invasive IPMCs were further divided into 12 minimally invasive IPMCs (MI-IPMCs) and 11 invasive carcinomas originating from IPMCs (IC-IPMCs) according to the Japan Pancreatic Society classification. The rate of strongly positive cases with more than 30% of the cancer stroma area expressing TSP1 was significantly higher in MI-IPMC and IC-IPMC than in noninvasive IPMC (P = 0.035, 0.005). Furthermore, patients in the strongly positive group had a significantly poorer prognosis compared to patients in the negative-weakly positive group (P = 0.008, log-rank test). Of the 80 tumors, 22 were classified into gastric-, 45 into intestinal-, 7 into pancreatobiliary-, and 6 into oncocytic-type IPMNs according to criteria described previously. The cases with a strongly positive expression of TSP1 were frequently detected in the pancreatobiliary and oncocytic types (P = 0.001). In conclusion, stromal TSP1 expression is a prognostic indicator and a new marker of invasiveness in IPMN.