Abstract

Stromal tumors of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract have generated considerable controversy about their direction and level of differentiation, particularly about whether the tumor cells are smooth muscle or Schwann cells. In an attempt to characterize these tumors, the immunohistochemical staining patterns of desmin, vimentin, actin, and S-100 protein were studied in 41 GI stromal tumors, using the avidin-biotin method, and compared with normal host smooth muscle and nerve and with esophageal and uterine leiomyomas. Twenty gastric and one rectal tumor stained diffusely with vimentin and actin, but not with desmin, and had scattered strongly S-100-positive cells that might either be trapped Schwann cells or tumor cells. Twenty small bowel tumors stained similarly to the gastric tumors with regard to vimentin, actin, and desmin, but most (17/20) had a unique, strongly positive geographic staining pattern with S-100. No differences in staining were noted between benign and malignant tumors in either gastric or small bowel sites, and most histologic patterns in tumors from similar locations stained similarly. These results suggest that GI stromal tumors are not truly "leiomyomas and leiomyosarcomas," but relatively undifferentiated tumors, with the expression of various antigens depending on their location in the gut.

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