Pulmonary adenocarcinoma with high-grade fetal adenocarcinoma component has a poor prognosis, comparable to that of micropapillary adenocarcinoma.
Masaki SuzukiYukio NakataniHiroyuki ItoHiroto NarimatsuKozo YamadaEmi YoshiokaKota WashimiYoichiro OkuboKae KawachiYohei MiyagiTomoyuki YokosePublished in: Modern pathology : an official journal of the United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology, Inc (2018)
Fetal adenocarcinoma is a rare variant of lung adenocarcinoma, which is subcategorized into low-grade and high-grade forms. High-grade fetal adenocarcinoma confers worse prognosis than low-grade fetal adenocarcinoma, but the prognostic differences between high-grade fetal adenocarcinoma and conventional lung adenocarcinoma are unknown. We reviewed tissue sections of 3719 cases of surgically resected primary lung cancers and found 53 lung cancers with a high-grade fetal adenocarcinoma component. We analyzed their clinicopathological and immunohistochemical features, and performed a prognostic analysis of adenocarcinomas with the fetal-type component. We further analyzed the prognostic differences between adenocarcinomas with the fetal-type component and conventional adenocarcinomas without the fetal-type component. Lung cancers with the fetal-type component predominantly occurred in elderly men with a smoking history. Twenty-nine patients had stage I disease, 13 patients had stage II, and 11 patients had stage III. The fetal-type histology was combined with conventional-type adenocarcinoma (41 cases), squamous cell carcinoma (5 cases), large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (5 cases), enteric adenocarcinoma (2 cases), and small cell carcinoma (1 case). The fetal-type component showed immunopositivity for α-fetoprotein (39%), glypican-3 (37%), and SALL4 (17%). The 5-year overall survivals of fetal-type-predominant and fetal-type-nonpredominant patients were 44 and 56%, respectively (P = 0.962). The 5-year overall survivals of lepidic-, acinar-, papillary-, solid-, and micropapillary-predominant adenocarcinomas, invasive mucinous adenocarcinomas, and adenocarcinomas with the fetal-type component were 94, 82, 77, 69, 57, 83, and 41%, respectively (P < 0.001). Univariate and multivariate analyses showed that adenocarcinomas with the fetal-type component had a significantly lower overall survival rate than the other histological subtypes, except for the micropapillary-predominant subtype. Our study demonstrated that adenocarcinomas with the fetal-type component had a poor prognosis that was comparable to that of micropapillary adenocarcinoma. The presence of the high-grade fetal adenocarcinoma component in lung adenocarcinomas is an important prognostic marker.
Keyphrases
- high grade
- low grade
- squamous cell carcinoma
- poor prognosis
- end stage renal disease
- locally advanced
- long non coding rna
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- prognostic factors
- chronic kidney disease
- stem cells
- peritoneal dialysis
- mesenchymal stem cells
- radiation therapy
- lymph node metastasis
- patient reported outcomes
- cell therapy
- patient reported
- african american