Abstract

The mucus-associated intestinal M3 antigen, normally restricted to intestinal goblet cells, was found in 35 out of 100 gastric adenocarcinomas belonging to intestinal (19/64) as well as diffuse (16/36) types according to Laurén's classification. often accompanying the other mucus-associated gastric M1 and M2 antigens. This M3 antigen was predominant over the gastric M antigens in 25 of these 35 tumors; 18 of these belonged to the histological intestinal type. According to the WHO classification, the M3 antigen was found to predominate in all mucinous adenocarcinomas (7/7), was never present in the undifferentiated carcinomas (0/8), but was also found in some tubulo-papillar (16/57) and signet-ring cell (12/27) adenocarcinomas. This antigen could be used as a new criterion and incorporated into a point system containing morphological and tumor cell behavioral considerations; then it would appear to be a good marker for intestinal-type differentiation. Indeed, 22 of these 25 gastric adenocarcinomas which produced predominantly M3 antigen showed such an intestinal-like differentiation. The M antigen pattern of gastric carcinoma suggested a duodenal rather than colonic-type differentiation.

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