High Homogeneity of Mesothelin Expression in Primary and Metastatic Ovarian Cancer

Sören Weidemann, Natalia Gorbokon, Maximilian Lennartz, Claudia Hube-Magg, Christoph Fraune, Christian Bernreuther, Till S. Clauditz, Frank Jacobsen, Kristina Jansen, Barbara Schmalfeldt, Linn Wölber, Peter Paluchowski, Enikö Berkes, Uwe Heilenkötter, Guido Sauter, Ria Uhlig, Waldemar Wilczak, Stefan Steurer, Ronald Simon, Till KrechAndreas Marx, Eike Burandt, Patrick Lebok

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

To study the extent of heterogeneity of mesothelin overexpression in primary ovarian cancers and their peritoneal and lymph node metastases, a tissue microarray (TMA) was constructed from multiple sites of 220 ovarian cancers and analyzed by immunohistochemistry. One tissue core each was taken from up to 18 different tumor blocks per cancer, resulting in a total of 2460 tissue spots from 423 tumor sites (188 primary cancers, 162 peritoneal carcinosis, and 73 lymph node metastases). Positive mesothelin expression was found in 2041 of the 2342 (87%) arrayed tissue spots and in 372 of the 392 (95%) tumor sites that were interpretable for mesothelin immunohistochemistry. Intratumoral heterogeneity was found in 23% of 168 primary cancer sites interpretable for mesothelin and decreased to 12% in 154 peritoneal carcinosis and to 6% in 71 lymph node metastases (P<0.0001). Heterogeneity between the primary tumor and matched peritoneal carcinosis was found in 16% of 102 cancers with interpretable mesothelin results. In these cancers, the mesothelin status switched from positive in the primary tumor to negative in the peritoneal carcinosis (3 cancers) in or vice versa (2 cancers), or a mixture of positive and negative peritoneal carcinoses was found (11 cancers). No such switch was seen between the mesothelin-interpretable primary tumors and their nodal metastases of 59 cancers, and only 1 mesothelin-positive tumor had a mixture of positive and negative lymph node metastases. In conclusion, mesothelin expression is frequent and highly homogeneous in ovarian cancer.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)77-83
Number of pages7
JournalApplied Immunohistochemistry and Molecular Morphology
Volume31
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Feb 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • heterogeneity
  • immunohistochemistry
  • mesothelin
  • ovarian cancer
  • tissue microarray

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'High Homogeneity of Mesothelin Expression in Primary and Metastatic Ovarian Cancer'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this