Back to Search Start Over

Cytokeratin 10 (CK10) expression in cancer: A tissue microarray study on 11,021 tumors

Authors :
Ria Uhlig
Moussa Abboud
Natalia Gorbokon
Maximilian Lennartz
Sebastian Dwertmann Rico
Simon Kind
Viktor Reiswich
Florian Viehweger
Martina Kluth
Claudia Hube-Magg
Christian Bernreuther
Franziska Büscheck
Till S. Clauditz
Christoph Fraune
Andrea Hinsch
Frank Jacobsen
Till Krech
Patrick Lebok
Stefan Steurer
Eike Burandt
Sarah Minner
Andreas Marx
Ronald Simon
Guido Sauter
Anne Menz
Source :
Annals of diagnostic pathology. 60
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Cytokeratin 10 (CK10) is a type I acidic low molecular weight cytokeratin which is mainly expressed in keratinizing squamous epithelium of the skin. Variable levels of CK10 protein have been described in squamous carcinomas of different sites and in some other epithelial neoplasms. To comprehensively determine the prevalence of CK10 expression in normal and neoplastic tissues, a tissue microarray containing 11,021 samples from 131 different tumor types and subtypes was analyzed by immunohistochemistry. CK10 immunostaining was detectable in 41 (31.3 %) of 131 tumor categories, including 18 (13.7 %) tumor types with at least one strongly positive case. The highest rate of positive staining was found in squamous cell carcinomas from various sites of origin (positive in 18.6 %-66.1 %) and in Warthin tumors of salivary glands (47.8 %), followed by various tumor entities known to potentially exhibit areas with squamous cell differentiation such as teratomas (33.3 %), basal cell carcinomas of the skin (14.3 %), adenosquamous carcinomas of the cervix (11.1 %), and several categories of urothelial neoplasms (3.1 %-16.8 %). In a combined analysis of 956 squamous cell carcinomas from 11 different sites of origin, reduced CK10 staining was linked to high grade (p 0.0001) and advanced stage (p = 0.0015) but unrelated to HPV infection. However, CK10 staining was not statistically related to grade (p = 0.1509) and recurrence-free (p = 0.5247) or overall survival (p = 0.5082) in 176 cervical squamous cell carcinomas. In the urinary bladder, CK10 staining occurred more commonly in muscle-invasive (17.7 %) than in non-invasive urothelial carcinomas (4.0 %-6.0 %; p 0.0001). In summary, our data corroborate a role of CK10 as a suitable marker for mature, keratinizing squamous cell differentiation in epithelial tissues. CK10 immunohistochemistry may thus be instrumental for a more objective evaluation of the clinical significance of focal squamous differentiation in cancer.

Details

ISSN :
15328198
Volume :
60
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of diagnostic pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....22378beb5456c142b238edc6e7391d9a