Abstract
There is a great need for markers that distinguish slowly progressive from rapidly progressive prostate cancers in paraffin-embedded tissues. CD44, an adhesion molecule that has been useful for the prediction of prognosis in some other cancers, has not been described in prostate cancer. The expression of CD44 was investigated with the monoclonal antibody GKW.A3 in prostate cancer in formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue sections of (1) whole prostates from 50 patients with 74 prostate cancers; and (2) lymph node metastases from 14 patients. Sixty percent of primary prostate cancers expressed CD44 moderately to strongly. No metastases expressed CD44 moderately to strongly; only 14% of metastases expressed even low levels of immunohistochemically detectable CD44. There is a difference between primary and metastatic prostate cancer (P <.0006) in the expression of CD44 and an inverse correlation (P <.05) between histological differentiation (Gleason grade) and the expression of CD44. The magnitude of the differential expression of CD44 in primary and metastatic prostate cancers suggests it should be investigated as an indicator of prognosis in a large prospective study.
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