Abstract

Purpose: The impact of cancer stem cells on breast cancer tumor biology has been poorly investigated during the last years. In the present study we sought to identify the expression of OCT-4 and DAZL, two prominent stem cell biomarkers, on malignant breast lesions. Methods: A retrospective analysis of patients that underwent simple or radical mastectomy was performed. Immunohistochemical expression of OCT-4 and DAZL was sought, and real time PCR was also applied in deparaffinized tissue samples retrieved from the pathology bank of our hospital. Results: Eighteen women aged 43-84 years old (median 57 years) were included in the present study. Of those, 10 women had invasive ductal carcinoma, 4 women had in situ ductal carcinoma and 4 women had invasive lobular carcinoma. Immunohistochemistry of tissue samples did not reveal expression of OCT-4, whereas DAZL was expressed in only 3 samples. Real time PCR was available in 13 samples as the control gene (G6PD) was not expressed in 5 samples. The 13 studied breast cell samples showed positive expression for the Oct-4 gene. In the same population the expression of DAZL varied significantly with 9 samples showing complete absence of expression and 4 providing a small signal in the last cycles, indicating barely detectable expression. The expression was significant in lobular carcinoma cases compared to cases with invasive or in situ ductal carcinoma. Conclusion: The findings of our study indicate the difficulty of retrieving reliable tissue samples following the process of deparaffinization and points towards the need for prospective case control studies that will be based on fresh tissue samples for the analysis of stem cell markers. Nevertheless, it also indicates a potentially increased expression of stemness markers in lobular carcinoma samples compared to ductal cancer cases, an observation that requires further research in the future.

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