Abstract

The immunoperoxidase localization of the alpha and beta subunits of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) and of human placental lactogen (hPL) was studied in ten extragonadal nontrophoblastic tumors associated with raised serum levels of one or more of these placental proteins. Three of the tumors were bronchial carcinomas, one was a gastric carcinoma, two were malignant carcinoids (one bronchial and one gastric), two were pancreatic islet cell carcinomas, and two were metastatic carcinomas with an unknown primary site. The maximum alpha subunit serum level was 33,000 ng/ml (gastric carcinoid), the maximum hCG/hCG-beta level was 705,000 ng/ml, and the maximum hPL level was 50 ng/ml (both in the gastric carcinoma). An indirect immunoperoxidase technique and rabbit polyclonal affinity-purified antibodies and peroxidase conjugates were used on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections. Five blocks (eight cases) or six blocks (two cases) from various sites were obtained from each patient at surgery and/or autopsy. Positive stains for hCG/hCG-beta were seen in six of seven tumors (25/37 blocks) with raised levels, for the alpha subunit in nine of nine tumors (30/47 blocks), and for hPL in two of five tumors (4/26 blocks). Only a relatively minor number of the cells were positive, and within the same case, there was considerable site-to-site variation in the number of positive cells. Large bizarre cells contained hCG/hCG-beta as well as the alpha subunit, if it was demonstrated in the same tumor as the beta subunit. Otherwise, the alpha subunit was found in small unremarkable cells. Giant cells that were smaller than those positive for hCG/hCG-beta contained in hPL. In some serial sections, hCG-alpha, hCG/hCG-beta, and hPL were segregated in different cell populations, supporting the concepts of their separate genetic control.

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