Abstract

BackgroundNeuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) are a complex group of tumours that occur in many organs. Routinely used IHC markers for NEN diagnosis include CgA, synaptophysin, Ki67 and CD56. These have limitations including lack of correlation to clinical outcomes and their presence in non-tumour tissue. Identification of additional markers and more quantitative analyses of tumour tissue has the potential to contribute to improved clinical outcomes. We used qRT-PCR to profile the expression levels of a panel of markers in tumour and matched non-tumour tissue from a patient with a G1 pancreatic neuroendocrine tumour. Differences in mRNA levels between tumour and non-tumour tissue were compared with IHC analyses of the same sample.Case presentationAn elderly man presented with lower abdominal pain for 6 months. Histological analysis identified a low grade, well differentiated pancreatic endocrine neoplasm. Twenty-seven tumour markers for neuroendocrine status, proliferation, stem cell phenotype, angiogenesis, epithelial to mesenchymal transition, cell adhesion, differentiation and tumour suppression were selected from previous studies and mRNA levels of these markers were measured in tumour and adjacent non-tumour tissue sample using qRT-PCR. IHC was carried out on the same tissue to detect the corresponding marker proteins. Of the markers analysed, seven showed higher mRNA levels in tumour relative to non-tumour tissue while thirteen had lower expression in tumour relative to non-tumour tissue. Substantial differences in mRNA levels were a gain of CgA, CD56, β-catenin, CK20, PDX1 and p53 and loss of Ki67, PCAD, CK7, CD31, MENA, ECAD, EPCAM, CDX2 and CK6. Comparison of qRT-PCR data with IHC showed correlation between fifteen markers.ConclusionOur study is unique as it included matched controls that provided a comparative assessment for tumour tissue analysis, whereas many previous studies report tumour data only. Additionally, we utilised qRT-PCR, a relatively quantitative diagnostic tool for differential marker profiling, having the advantage of being reproducible, fast, cheap and accurate. qRT-PCR has the potential to improve the defining of tumour phenotypes and, in combination with IHC may have clinical utility towards improving tumour stratification or distinguishing tumour grades. The results need to be validated with different grades of NENs and related to clinical outcomes.

Highlights

  • Neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) are a complex group of tumours that occur in many organs

  • Neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) are a heterogeneous group of malignancies that can occur in all organs of the body, with the gastrointestinal system being a common site of localisation

  • This study indicates that quantitative real-time reverse transcription PCR (qRT-PCR) can distinguish phenotypic differences between tumour and nontumour tissue

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Summary

Introduction

Neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) are a complex group of tumours that occur in many organs. Used IHC markers for NEN diagnosis include CgA, synaptophysin, Ki67 and CD56 These have limitations including lack of correlation to clinical outcomes and their presence in non-tumour tissue. NENs express markers of neuroendocrinology differentiation and may secrete a range of peptides that can cause hormonal symptoms [2] Some features of neuroendocrine differentiation are common to all NENs while others may be site-specific [3]. This has caused confusion in the classification of NENs because morphologically similar tumours can be found in different organs. Non-functional pancreatic tumours account for 85% of all pancreatic tumours and have a significantly worse outcome than functional tumours and they may only present after metastasis [5]

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