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Original Article

The c-erbB-2 Protein in Primary and Metastatic Breast Carcinomas

, , , , , & show all
Pages 281-289 | Accepted 28 Nov 1990, Published online: 10 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Material from 41 patients with primary breast carcinoma and lymph node metastases at the time of primary surgical intervention was immunostained for c-erbB-2 protein, neuron-specific enolase (NSE), and estrogen receptors. Thirty of the primary breast carcinomas were of ductal type. Six were classified as infiltrating lobular carcinomas, 2 were apocrine, 1 was mucinous, and 1 was a tubular carcinoma. One tumor could not be classified as ductal or lobular by light microscopic examination alone. The number of lymph node metastases available varied from 1 to 14 per case (median, 3.9). Nine (22%) of the primary breast carcinomas (8 ductal and 1 apocrine) expressed c-erbB-2 protein and showed c-erbB-2 gene amplification; 12 expressed NSE immunoreactivity. None expressed both markers. Estrogen receptor immunoreactivity was present in 23 of the 41 cases, including 9 of the NSE-positive cases. C-erbB-2 protein-positive metastases were present in 18 cases (44%), and in 13 cases all metastases were immunostained. In 5 cases the expression of c-erbB-2 protein varied from metastasis to metastasis. NSE immunoreactivity was expressed in 10 cases, and in 3 cases with minor NSE-positive cell populations the metastatic lesions expressed c-erbB-2 protein as well. All 9 primary breast carcinomas expressing c-erbB-2 protein had lymph node metastases with c-erbB-2-immunoreactive tumor cells. Eight of the 9 c-erbB-2 protein-negative primary tumors with metastases expressing c-erbB-2 protein showed no amplification of the c-erbB-2 gene. Thus expression of c-erbB-2 protein can occur during the metastatic process, even if it seems to be missing in the primary tumor. On the other hand, if a primary breast carcinoma expresses c-erbB-2 protein, this feature seems to be present in all the tumor metastases as well.

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