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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
metastases
)
103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors have recently identified a new cytokeratin (CK) polypeptide,
CK 20
, whose expression is almost entirely confined to the gastric and intestinal epithelium, urothelium, and Merkel cells. Seven monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) specific for
CK 20
were raised and characterized by applying immunoblotting and immunocytochemical screening. All of them reacted on frozen tissue sections. A further MAb, IT-Ks20.8, recognized
CK 20
in sections of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue samples. A total of 711 cases of primary and
metastatic cancer
, mostly carcinomas, were analyzed immunohistochemically for
CK-20
expression, using
CK-20
specific guinea-pig antibodies and MAbs. The expression spectrum of
CK 20
in carcinomas resembled that seen in the corresponding normal epithelia of origin.
CK-20
positivity was seen in the vast majority of adenocarcinomas of the colon (89/93 cases), mucinous ovarian tumors, transitional-cell and Merkel-cell carcinomas and frequently also in adenocarcinomas of the stomach, bile system, and pancreas. Most squamous cell carcinomas in general and most adenocarcinomas from other sites (breast, lung, endometrium), nonmucinous tumors of the ovary, and small-cell lung carcinomas were essentially or completely negative. The authors propose to use
CK 20
as a diagnostic marker valuable in distinguishing different types of carcinomas, notably when presenting as
metastases
.
...
PMID:Cytokeratin 20 in human carcinomas. A new histodiagnostic marker detected by monoclonal antibodies. 137 Dec 4
Four mucinous sweat gland carcinomas were examined for the distribution of cytokeratin (CK) polypeptides using immunohistochemical techniques on paraffin-embedded sections. All the tumour specimens reacted with monoclonal antibodies to CK 7, CK 8, CK 18 and CK 19. Antibodies to CK 1, CK 1/2/10/14, CK 1/5/10/11, CK 13, CK 14 and
CK 20
did not stain any of the carcinomas. The results add additional support to the notion that mucinous sweat gland carcinoma represents a tumour histogenetically related to the eccrine secretory coil. Furthermore, the absence of
CK 20
might significantly contribute to the differentiation of this tumour from cutaneous
metastases
from gastrointestinal carcinomas.
...
PMID:Cytokeratin expression in mucinous sweat gland carcinomas: an immunohistochemical analysis of four cases. 138 Apr 81
Cytokeratins, which comprise a multigene family of 20 related polypeptides (CKs 1-20), are constituents of the intermediate filaments of epithelial cells, in which they are expressed in various combinations depending on the epithelial type and the degree of differentiation. Of these, CK 19 (400 amino acids; 44.1 kilodaltons) is an example of a widely distributed CK, being expressed in various epithelia, including many simple epithelia. In contrast, the recently identified
CK 20
(424 amino acids; 48.6 kilodaltons) is essentially confined to gastrointestinal epithelia, the urothelium and Merkel cells. The differential expression of individual CKs in various types of carcinomas makes them useful markers for histopathological carcinoma subtyping, providing relevant information concerning the differentiation and origin of carcinomas, especially when tumors first present as
metastases
. The CKs that are of particular value for differential diagnosis include
CK 20
, as it is mainly expressed in carcinomas derived from
CK 20
-positive epithelia; it is also found in bile-tract, pancreatic and mucinous ovarian adenocarcinomas, being absent in most other carcinomas. In certain carcinoma types, the changes in the expression of individual CKs that may occur during tumor progression could be of prognostic relevance. It remains to be established whether the serological detection of fragments of not only widely distributed but also more restrictedly expressed CKs may provide useful serological tumor markers in the future.
...
PMID:Cytokeratins in the histological diagnosis of malignant tumors. 752 43
The most common carcinomas metastatic to the ovary that mimic ovarian primaries are colonic adenocarcinomas and endometrial carcinomas. Conventional histochemical staining procedures, even in combination with additional immunohistochemical assays, are of limited value in distinguishing between these
metastases
and primary ovarian carcinomas. In this study we investigated whether the application of monoclonal antibodies against keratins 7, 8, and 20 could help in differentiating between these categories. The reactivity patterns of 40 carcinomas metastatic to the ovary were compared with those of their primary carcinomas on the one hand and with various primary ovarian carcinomas and mesotheliomas on the other. Colon cancer metastatic to the ovary was keratin 7 negative and
keratin 20
positive in 94% of the cases; in contrast, all primary ovarian carcinomas were keratin 7 positive and
keratin 20
negative, with the exception of two cases of mucinous cystadenocarcinoma. Ovarian metastases of gastric cancer usually contained keratins 7 and 20.
Metastases
of endometrial cancer to the ovary and primary ovarian carcinomas usually showed similar keratin expression. We propose that keratin 7 and 20 antibodies may be of help to distinguish between primary ovarian carcinomas and carcinoma
metastases
in the ovary.
...
PMID:Keratins 7 and 20 as diagnostic markers of carcinomas metastatic to the ovary. 754 41
Keratin 20 is a recently identified keratin protein distributed particularly in the epithelial cells of the gastrointestinal tract. In this study,
keratin 20
was immunohistochemically evaluated in 788 epithelial tumors of different organs. Keratin 20 was consistently present in colonic adenocarcinomas and their
metastases
in lymph nodes, liver, lung, and ovaries; most primary and metastatic colon carcinomas showed high numbers of positive cells independent of their level of differentiation. Adenocarcinomas of the upper gastrointestinal tract, pancreas, and cholangiocarcinomas showed variable reactivity. Hepatocellular carcinomas and carcinoid tumors often showed focal reactivity limited to scattered tumor cells. In contrast,
keratin 20
was virtually absent in primary adenocarcinomas of lung, ovaries, and endometrium. Notable exceptions among ovarian tumors were the mucinous neoplasms that showed variable, sometimes significant
keratin 20
reactivity. Transitional cell carcinomas irrespective of grade were usually positive, whereas most prostatic and renal adenocarcinomas were negative or showed only single positive cells. Typically negative were squamous cell carcinomas of all organs and carcinomas of the breast. Merkel cell carcinomas of the skin showed consistent reactivity, whereas small cell carcinomas of the lung were negative. On the basis of these observations,
keratin 20
seems to be a suitable adjunct marker to evaluate the primary origin of carcinomas in specific contexts, especially to separate adenocarcinomas of gastrointestinal versus nongastrointestinal origin.
...
PMID:Keratin 20: immunohistochemical marker for gastrointestinal, urothelial, and Merkel cell carcinomas. 756 35
The differentiation of ovarian
metastases
from colonic carcinoma and primary ovarian carcinoma can be difficult. To assess the utility of cytokeratin 7 and
cytokeratin 20
immunostains in this setting, we studied routinely processed, formalin-fixed tissue from 165 ovarian tumors, including 45 serous carcinomas, 40 mucinous carcinomas, 64 endometrioid carcinomas, and 16 metastatic colonic adenocarcinomas with an avidin-biotin immunohistochemical technique. A cytokeratin 7+/
cytokeratin 20
- immunophenotype was seen in 86% of the endometrioid carcinomas, 27% of the mucinous carcinomas, 40% of the serous carcinomas, and none of the metastatic colorectal carcinomas. Conversely, a cytokeratin 7-/cytokeratin 20+ immunophenotype was seen in 94% of the metastatic colonic tumors, 5% of the mucinous carcinomas, and none of the endometrioid or serous tumors. We concluded that cytokeratin immunostains can be helpful in distinguishing metastatic colonic adenocarcinoma from primary ovarian carcinomas, particularly endometrioid carcinomas. Rare ovarian mucinous carcinomas may show the same immunophenotype as metastatic colonic carcinomas.
...
PMID:Cytokeratin immunostaining in differentiating primary ovarian carcinoma from metastatic colonic adenocarcinoma. 893 13
Women with pseudomyxoma peritonei (PMP), characterized by multifocal mucinous implants (disseminated peritoneal adenomucinosis), often have synchronous appendiceal and ovarian mucinous tumors. There has been considerable debate as to whether the ovarian tumors are secondary to the appendiceal tumor or are independent primary ovarian tumors; the latter are usually classified as mucinous tumors of low malignant potential (MLMP). It has been reported that cytokeratins (CK) 7, 18, and 20, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), and human alveolar macrophage 56 (HAM-56) are useful markers for distinguishing primary ovarian neoplasms from
metastases
of intestinal origin. Nearly all primary ovarian MLMP tumors and mucinous carcinomas are positive for CK 7, 18, and 20, CEA, and HAM-56, whereas most colorectal adenocarcinomas are negative for both CK 7 and HAM-56 and positive for
CK 20
and CEA. Thirteen appendiceal and 14 ovarian mucinous tumors from 14 cases of PMP and 11 primary ovarian MLMP tumors were studied immunohistochemically for expression of CK 7, 18, and 20, monoclonal and polyclonal CEA (mCEA and pCEA), and HAM-56. Of 14 cases of PMP, 10 (71.4%) had identical staining patterns for all antibodies in both the appendiceal and ovarian tumors. For eight of these, the pattern of immunoreactivity was characterized by negative reactions for CK 7 and HAM-56 and positive reactions for CK 18 and 20, mCEA, and pCEA. One additional case for which only the ovarian tumor could be stained had the same pattern. The remaining two cases were also positive for CK 18 and 20 and CEA, but in addition were positive for CK 7. Two cases were discordant only for CK 7 and one case was discordant for both CK 7 and HAM-56. All 11 MLMP tumors were positive for CK 7 and 18, and pCEA. Eight (72.7%) of 11 were positive for HAM-56, mCEA, and
CK 20
. There was a statistically significant difference in the frequency of immunoreactivity for CK 7 (p = 0.0005) and HAM-56 (p = 0.0002) between the ovarian mucinous tumors in PMP and the MLMP tumors, with the ovarian tumors in PMP tending to be negative for CK 7 and HAM-56, similar to the appendiceal adenomas. Most ovarian mucinous tumors in PMP demonstrate a pattern of immunoreactivity with CK 7, 18, and 20, CEA, and HAM-56 that is identical to the associated appendiceal adenoma and distinct from primary ovarian MLMP tumors, consistent with the interpretation that these ovarian tumors are secondary to the appendiceal tumor.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical evidence supporting the appendiceal origin of pseudomyxoma peritonei in women. 898 25
The immunophenotype of HT29 human colon cancer cells implanted into severe combined immunodeficient mice was assessed in primary tumours and their
metastases
in the lungs using an indirect immunohistochemical method. After primary tumours were surgically removed, the
metastases
were given time to develop, thus paralleling the clinical situation. While vimentin was negative in both primary and secondary tumours, E-cadherin was present as membrane-bound labelling in the primary tumours only. Whereas the markers p53, MIB1, PCNA and CEA were consistently positive in both primary and metastatic tumours, CD44 variant 6 and CA125 were negative in
metastases
but positive in the primary tumours. There was a significant increase in the percentage of cells labelled for p53 in the primary tumours compared with the
metastases
. For the proliferation markers, there was no significant difference in labelling between primary tumours and
metastases
for MIB1. Of the cytokeratins examined,
CK 20
gave the strongest and most consistent reaction in both primary and secondary tumours. The results indicate that, for certain immunohistochemical markers, results are the same in both primary tumours and
metastases
. Hence, in these cases, antigens that are expressed on the primary tumour as well as on the
metastases
can serve as target molecules for immunologically based forms of treatment of
metastases
.
...
PMID:Immunophenotyping of human HT29 colon cancer cell primary tumours and their metastases in severe combined immunodeficient mice. 918 53
Twenty cases of ovarian
metastases
derived from appendiceal adenocarcinomas were analyzed. The most common presentation was a pelvic mass. The appendiceal and ovarian tumors were diagnosed concurrently in 15 cases; in the remaining five, the ovarian tumors were diagnosed before the appendiceal tumor. The appendiceal adenocarcinomas demonstrated four morphologic patterns: 1) signet ring cell type, with or without glandular or goblet cell differentiation (14 cases); 2) mixed signet ring cell and intestinal type (two cases); 3) intestinal type (two cases); and 4) typical colorectal type (two cases). The ovarian tumors were bilateral in 16 cases and were histologically similar to the associated appendiceal tumor in each case. Ovarian metastases that demonstrate signet ring cell, glandular, and goblet cell differentiation mimic
metastases
from gastric adenocarcinoma. Those that are derived from well-differentiated mucinous appendiceal adenocarcinomas mimic primary ovarian mucinous tumors and
metastases
from the pancreas and biliary tract.
Metastases
of appendiceal adenocarcinomas of colorectal type simulate both metastatic colorectal carcinoma and primary ovarian endometrioid carcinomas. The appendiceal and ovarian tumors were immunophenotypically identical in each case. Approximately 50% of the appendiceal and ovarian tumors were positive for cytokeratin 7 (CK 7), and all were positive for
cytokeratin 20
(
CK 20
).
CK 20
positivity of the ovarian tumors is consistent with gastrointestinal origin; CK 7 positivity does not confirm ovarian origin, because appendiceal carcinomas are positive in 50% of cases. Metastatic appendiceal adenocarcinoma should be considered in the differential diagnosis of mucinous ovarian tumors with signet ring cell, goblet cell, or intestinal type differentiation, especially when these tumors are associated with extraovarian disease and are bilateral.
...
PMID:The morphologic spectrum of ovarian metastases of appendiceal adenocarcinomas: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical analysis of tumors often misinterpreted as primary ovarian tumors or metastatic tumors from other gastrointestinal sites. 933 Dec 86
Perianal Paget's disease is rare, and its relationship to an associated internal regional cancer has been ill defined. We analyzed the histologic and immunohistochemical features of perianal Paget's disease in 11 patients to determine the frequency and relationship of associated regional internal carcinoma and to gain insight into its histogenesis. Of five patients with documented rectal adenocarcinoma, it was discovered synchronously with the Paget's disease in four and, subsequently, in one. Paget's cells of signet ring type predominated in four cases. Intraepithelial glands with intraluminal dirty necrosis were present in four cases. The immunophenotype in four cases studied was cytokeratin (CK)7+/CK20+/gross cystic disease fluid protein- (GCDFP) in both the intraepithelial Paget's cells and the invasive rectal adenocarcinoma. Six patients did not have documented rectal carcinoma. The Paget's cells in four were CK7+/
CK20
-/GCDFP15+. Three of these had purely intraepithelial Paget's disease, and invasive or
metastatic disease
developed in none after wide local excision. Bilateral inguinal lymph node
metastases
developed in the fourth patient, and the patient died 8 months after diagnosis of Paget's disease. In two patients, the Paget's cells were CK7+/CK20+/GCDFP15-. Recurrent intraepithelial perianal Paget's disease developed in one patient at 7 months; the patient was alive without disease at 24 months, and the other patient had several intraepithelial recurrences of perianal Paget's disease, and, subsequently, a large perianal tumor of uncertain cell type developed at 108 months, which led to the patient's death. We conclude that there are two types of perianal Paget's disease. One type has endodermal differentiation with gastrointestinal-type glands containing intraluminal dirty necrosis, numerous signet ring cells,
CK20
positivity, and GCDFP15 negativity. Such cases are especially likely to be associated with synchronous or metachronous rectal adenocarcinoma. The other type is a primary cutaneous intraepithelial neoplasm in which the Paget's cells display sweat gland differentiation, including GCDFP15 positivity; it generally lacks gastrointestinal-type glands, intraluminal dirty necrosis, and
CK20
positivity. The CK7 is a sensitive, albeit nonspecific, marker for Paget's cells.
...
PMID:Perianal Paget's disease: a histologic and immunohistochemical study of 11 cases with and without associated rectal adenocarcinoma. 950 Feb 17
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