Immunohistochemical expression
Leukaemic myeloid and monocytic cells. Almost all cases of CML are positive. Lower rates of positivity are seen in ALL.
Reed-Sternberg cells and mononuclear Hodgkin's cells, staining about 80% of cases of classical Hodgkin lymphoma11. The staining is characteristically membrane plus a paranuclear focus associated with the Golgi apparatus
Most adenocarcinoma
Differentiation of adenocarcinoma from mesothelioma: interpretation may be difficult in cases in which tumour cells have phagocytosed inflammatory cells, or the CD15 released by dying inflammatory cells6.
|
adenocarcinoma |
mesothelioma |
Sheibani 19868 |
47/50 |
0/28 |
Sheibani 198614 |
105/179 (various sites of origin, including lung) |
0/18 |
Warnock 198815 |
34/44 (pulmonary adenocarcinomas and large cell carcinomas) |
2/27 |
Ordonez 198916 |
14/23 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
0/19 (all epithelioid mesotheliomas) |
Wick 19909 |
52/52 (peripheral adenocarcinoma of the lung with pleural invasion) |
0/51 (epithelioid pleural mesotheliomas) |
Wick 199040 |
38/43 (23/23 peripheral pulmonary adenocarcinomas involving pleura, 8/10 serous surface papillary adenocarcinomas of peritoneum, 7/10 breast carcinomas metastatic to pleura. staining was predominantly membranous) |
0/41 (0/21 malignant epithelioid pleural mesotheliomas, 3/20 malignant epithelioid peritoneal mesotheliomas showed reactivity of minute foci of 5-10 cells) |
O'Hara 199017 |
23/28 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
0/20 |
Tickman 199018 (study done on cell blocks from serous effusions) |
30/69 (23 mammary, 16 ovarian, 10 pulmonary, 7 gastrointestinal and 13 others) |
0/2 |
McCaughey 199119 |
not studied |
2/98 |
Nance 199120 (study done on cell blocks from serous effusions) |
11/26 (various sites of origin) |
0/1 |
Wirth 199121 |
16/20 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
4/50 |
Collins 199222 |
26/48 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
1/31 (one case showed minimal focal positivity) |
Gaffey 199223 |
not studied |
0/49 (32 epithelioid and 17 biphasic) |
Brown 199324 |
79/103 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
2/34 (all epithelioid mesotheliomas) |
Moch 199325 |
16/24 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
0/27 (all histological types) |
Dejmek 199426 |
38/43 (various sites of origin) |
31/93 |
Maquire 199427 (study done on cell blocks from serous effusions) |
18/23 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
0/44 |
Bailey 199628 (study done on cell blocks from serous effusions) |
8/11 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
0/5 |
Doglioni 19961 |
19/22 |
0/20 |
Dejmek 19975 |
35/43 |
22/110 |
Bateman 199729 |
6/14 (various sites of origin, metastatic to lung and pleura) |
0/17 |
Delahaye 199730 (study done on cell blocks from serous effusions) |
25/88 (various sites of origin)
|
0/41 |
Riera 199731 |
159/211 (various sites of origin: 115 cases intense, 35 moderate and 9 weak staining. 70 cases stained >50% of cells, 46 cases 26-50% of cells and 9 cases 10-25% of cells. 104/123 lung adenocarcinomas were positive. Staining of <10% of cells was considered negative.) |
2/57 (all epithelioid mesotheliomas: the two cases showed intense, predominantly membrane, staining but on only 10-25% of cells. Staining of <10% of cells was considered negative.) |
Wilson 199732 |
8/9 (lung and ovarian carcinomas) |
3/21 |
Ordonez 199733 |
65/92 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
0/120 |
Leers 199810 |
9/21 (various sites of origin. All 9 cases showing staining of >10% of cells.) |
2/20 (Both cases showed staining of <10% of cells.) |
Chenard-Neu 199834 |
15/30 (various sites of origin) |
0/28 |
Garcia-Prats 199835 |
8/18 (7/15 pulmonary and 1/3 extra-pulmonary adenocarcinomas, metastatic to pleura) |
2/40 (1/26 epithelioid, 1/10 sarcomatoid, 0/4 biphasic) |
Ordonez 199836 |
28/45 (30 ovarian [10 primary and 20 metastatic to the peritoneum] and 15 papillary serous carcinomas of the peritoneum) |
0/35 (all epithelial peritoneal mesotheliomas) |
Brockstedt 20002 |
46/57 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
18/119 |
Dejmek 200037 (cytospins of serous fluids) |
24/47 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
5/35 |
Gonzalez-Lois 200138 |
8/11 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
3/41 (3/33 epithelioid, 0/6 sarcomatoid, 0/1 mixed and 0/1 lymphohistiocytoid mesotheliomas) |
Roberts 20014 |
9/18 (various sites of origin) |
7/111 (6/81 epithelioid, 0/11 sarcomatoid, 1/12 biphasic and 0/7 desmoplastic) |
Comin 20017 |
23/23 (primary pulmonary adenocarcinomas) |
2/42 (In the two cases which stained, less than 25% of cells were positive.) |
Miettinen 2001 |
not studied |
9/24 (5/17 epithelioid, 4/7 sarcomatoid: usually limited to <5% of tumour cells.) |
Abutaily 200213 |
5/11 (pulmonary adenocarcinomas: only the 11 of 35 cases which were E-cadherin positive / TTF-1 negative were tested) |
0/9 |
Ordonez 200339 |
36/50 (all primary lung adenocarcinomas: 7 case >75% of cells stained, 13 cases 50-75% of cells, 9 cases 25-50% of cells and 4 cases 1-25% of cells. Staining was granular in most cases, membranous in a minority.) |
0/60 (all epithelioid mesotheliomas)
|
Overall |
68% (1091/1606) |
7% (120/1646) |
A systematic review of twenty six studies (consisting of 1473 pulmonary adenocarcinomas and 1204 epithelioid mesotheliomas) reported sensitivities and specificities of CD15 for pulmonary adenocarcinoma of 72% and 93%41.
References
4 Roberts, F., C. M. Harper, et al. (2001). "Immunohistochemical analysis still has a limited role in the diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma. A study of thirteen antibodies." Am J Clin Pathol 116(2): 253-62. First published in abstract, Harper CM. Evaluation of a commercially available immunohistochemical diagnostic panel for malignant mesothelioma. J Pathol 2001:193(suppl):39A.
32 Wilson JD, Merino MJ, Harris C et al. Mesothelioma vs adenocarcinoma: does immunohistochemistry help? Lab Invest 1997;76:174A.
This page last revised 16.2.2006.
©SMUHT/PW Bishop