Abstract
Napsin A is a reliable marker for pulmonary adenocarcinoma and is
expressed in a subset of ovarian clear cell carcinomas (O-CCCs),
endometrial (EM) CCCs, and endometrioid carcinomas (EC). We investigated
napsin A levels in O-CCC and EM-CCC and compared these with levels in
other nonmucinous ovarian carcinomas and EM-EC, respectively. Napsin A,
thyroid transcription factor (TTF)-1, paired box (PAX) 8, and cancer
antigen (CA) 125 expression was evaluated in 111 ovarian and uterine
carcinoma cases (22 O-CCC, 15 EM-CCC, 13 ovarian EC (O-EC), 39
high-grade serous carcinoma [HGSC], and 22 EM-EC) using
immunohistochemistry. Napsin A immunoreactivity was observed in 21
(95.5%) of 22 O-CCC and 10 (66.7%) of 15 EM-CCC cases but was rare in
O-EC and EM-EC (7.7% and 4.5%) and undetectable in HGSC cases. Thyroid
transcription factor 1 was not expressed in O-CCC but was detected in 1
(6.7%) of 15 EM-CCC, 3 (23.1%) of 13 O-EC, 2 (5.1%) of 39 HGSC, and 1
(4.5%) of 22 EM-EC cases. All 111 cases examined were positive for PAX8,
whereas 3 (20.0%) of 15 of EM-CCC and 1 (4.5%) of 22 EM-EC cases were
negative for CA125. There were no napsin A/TTF-1 double-positive cases,
except for 1 EM-CCC, in which cells had a focal expression pattern. All
napsin A- and/or TTF-1-positive cases expressed PAX8 and CA125. In
conclusion, napsin A is frequently expressed in O-CCC and EM-CCC, rarely
in O-EC and EM-EC, and never in HGSC cases. These findings confirm the
importance of using a panel of antibodies that includes napsin A, TTF-1,
and PAX8 when evaluating metastatic carcinomas of unknown origin,
particularly when gynecologic and pulmonary adenocarcinomas are included
in the differential diagnosis.
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