Abstract

ContextThe lungs are a common site of tumor metastasis. While morphology and immunophenotype can help differentiate primary from metastatic tumors, distinguishing pulmonary invasive mucinous adenocarcinoma (PIMA) from metastatic colorectal adenocarcinoma (CRC) may occasionally be challenging due to overlapping morphological and immunohistochemical features. Lineage-specific markers such as CDX2, TTF-1, and napsin A are helpful with pulmonary non-mucinous adenocarcinoma (PNMA), however they are non-specific and insensitive when applied to PIMA. SATB2 is a newer marker that distinguishes CRC from upper gastrointestinal and pancreaticobiliary tumors; its utility in distinguishing CRC from PIMA has not been fully elucidated. ObjectiveTo evaluate the performance of lineage-specific and mucin glycoprotein immunostains in distinguishing PIMA and CRC. DesignWe stained tissue microarrays comprising 34 PNMA, 31 PIMA, and 32 CRC with CK7, CK20, SATB2, CDX2, villin, TTF-1, napsin A, and gel-forming mucins MUC2, MUC5AC, and MUC6. ResultsPIMA showed significant (>50% of cells) expression of SATB2 (6%), CDX2 (6%), villin (74%), TTF-1 (13%), and napsin A (23%). However, significant CK7 expression was seen in nearly all PIMA (30/31) and none of the metastatic CRC. ConclusionOur results suggest that CK7 remains one of the most useful markers for distinguishing primary PIMA from metastatic CRC. Expression of the mucin glycoproteins MUC5AC and MUC6 and lack of expression of MUC2 favored a diagnosis of PIMA, but expression of these markers was too heterogeneous to be of clinical utility. To our knowledge this is the only study comparing the immunohistochemical profile of PIMA and metastatic CRC in lung metastasectomy specimens.

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