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. 1984 Jan;44(1):285-92.

Immunocytochemical evaluation of human prostatic carcinomas for carcinoembryonic antigen, nonspecific cross-reacting antigen, beta-chorionic gonadotrophin, and prostate-specific antigen

  • PMID: 6197163

Immunocytochemical evaluation of human prostatic carcinomas for carcinoembryonic antigen, nonspecific cross-reacting antigen, beta-chorionic gonadotrophin, and prostate-specific antigen

D M Purnell et al. Cancer Res. 1984 Jan.

Abstract

The unlabeled antibody peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique was used to examine human malignant prostatic tissue (primary tumors) for the presence of prostate-specific antigen (PSA), carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), nonspecific cross-reacting antigen (NCA), and beta-chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG). The results were compared to those obtained with normal and hyperplastic prostate tissue (BPH). All specimens of neoplastic, hyperplastic, and normal prostate tissue showed immunostaining reactions for PSA. Immunostaining for PSA was relatively uniform among samples of normal and BPH tissue, but variations with respect to intensity of PSA immunostaining were noted among prostate tumors as well as between the neoplastic cells of individual tumors. Some areas of normal or hyperplastic prostatic epithelium within tumors showed stronger staining reactions for PSA than the tumor cells themselves. Using an antiserum which was able to detect both NCA and CEA, it was found that 16 of 38 tumors (42%) had positive immunostaining reactions. Of these, 15 were subsequently shown to contain only NCA immunoreactivity, and 1 tumor had both NCA and CEA immunoreactivity. NCA, but not CEA, immunoreactivity was identified in hyperplastic prostate tissue within tumor specimens and in BPH specimens. Neither antigen was detected in normal prostatic epithelium. Three of 38 tumors (8%) were found to contain neoplastic cells with HCG immunoreactivity. HCG immunoreactivity was not identified in BPH or normal prostatic tissue. Therefore, HCG and CEA immunoreactivity appear to be tumor-associated antigens in prostate cancer which are expressed with a low incidence. The results of the study identified prostate tumors with different patterns of immunocytochemical markers: 22 of 38 tumors (58%) contained only PSA immunoreactivity; 13 of 38 tumors (34%) contained PSA and NCA immunoreactivity; 2 of 38 tumors (5%) were positive for PSA, NCA, and HCG immunoreactivity; and 1 of 38 tumors (3%) contained PSA, NCA, HCG, and CEA immunoreactivity. Apart from PSA, which was present in all tumors, the markers studied here appeared to be more frequently expressed in well-differentiated tumors than in less-differentiated tumors. Our results suggest the possibility of subclassifying prostate tumors by means of immunocytochemistry.

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