1. Liver-intestine-cadherin is a sensitive marker of intestinal differentiation during Barrett's carcinogenesis.
- Author
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Mokrowiecka A, Zonnur S, Veits L, Musial J, Kordek R, Lochowski M, Kozak J, Malecka-Panas E, Vieth M, and Hartmann A
- Subjects
- Adenocarcinoma metabolism, Adenocarcinoma pathology, Aged, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Cadherins genetics, Cardia metabolism, Esophageal Neoplasms metabolism, Esophageal Neoplasms pathology, Female, Gastric Mucosa metabolism, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, Male, Middle Aged, Barrett Esophagus metabolism, Barrett Esophagus pathology, Biomarkers, Tumor metabolism, Cadherins metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic physiology
- Abstract
Background: Histopathologic differentiation between the stages of Barrett's carcinogenesis is often challenging. Liver-intestine (LI)-cadherin, an intestine-specific marker, is involved in intestinal metaplasia development in gastric and colon cancers and could be of value in diagnosis and differentiation., Aims: To examine the expression of LI-cadherin in the sequence of Barrett's carcinogenesis and to evaluate its association with clinicopathological data., Methods: LI-cadherin expression was immunohistologically investigated, by use of anti-CDH17 antibody, in gastric mucosa (GM) biopsies taken from the cardia (n = 9), in Barrett's esophagus (BE) without intraepithelial neoplasia (without IEN) (n = 9) and BE with low-grade IEN (n = 11), and in esophageal adenocarcinoma (ADC) (n = 13)., Results: The immunoreactivity score was highest in adenocarcinoma (mean IRS = 4.0), and dropped gradually from BE with IEN and BE without IEN (mean IRS = 2.0) to cardia mucosa (IRS = 0). Similarly, the intensity of staining and the percentage of positive cells increased during the sequential stages of BE carcinogenesis. Comparative analysis showed that LI-cadherin expression was significantly different between cardiac epithelium and ADC. Also, percentage of positive cells in GM was significantly different from that in BE with IEN. LI-cadherin IRS was lower for tumors with poor differentiation than for moderately differentiated tumors, but the difference was not statistically significant., Conclusions: LI-cadherin is a sensitive marker of intestinal metaplasia and can be helpful for early histologic diagnosis of Barrett's esophagus; it is, however, not significantly different between BE with and without IEN, and cannot be used to distinguish between these.
- Published
- 2013
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