Frequency of Androgen Receptor Positivity in Tumors: A Study Evaluating More Than 18,000 Tumors.
Florian ViehwegerJennifer HoopLisa-Marie TingerChristian BernreutherFranziska BüscheckTill Sebastian ClauditzAndrea HinschFrank JacobsenAndreas M LuebkeStefan SteurerClaudia Hube-MaggMartina KluthAndreas H MarxTill KrechPatrick LebokChristoph FrauneEike BurandtGuido SauterRonald SimonSarah MinnerPublished in: Biomedicines (2024)
Androgen receptor (AR) is a transcription factor expressed in various normal tissues and is a therapeutic target for prostate and possibly other cancers. A TMA containing 18,234 samples from 141 different tumor types/subtypes and 608 samples of 76 different normal tissue types was analyzed by immunohistochemistry. AR positivity was found in 116 tumor types including 66 tumor types (46.8%) with ≥1 strongly positive tumor. Moderate/strong AR positivity was detected in testicular sex cord-stromal tumors (93.3-100%) and neoplasms of the prostate (79.3-98.7%), breast (25.0-75.5%), other gynecological tumors (0.9-100%), kidney (5.0-44.1%), and urinary bladder (5.4-24.2%). Low AR staining was associated with advanced tumor stage (pTa versus pT2-4; p < 0.0001) in urothelial carcinoma; advanced pT ( p < 0.0001), high tumor grade ( p < 0.0001), nodal metastasis ( p < 0.0001), and reduced survival ( p = 0.0024) in invasive breast carcinoma; high pT ( p < 0.0001) and grade ( p < 0.0001) in clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC); and high pT ( p = 0.0055) as well as high grade ( p < 0.05) in papillary RCC. AR staining was unrelated to histopathological/clinical features in 157 endometrial carcinomas and in 221 ovarian carcinomas. Our data suggest a limited role of AR immunohistochemistry for tumor distinction and a prognostic role in breast and clear cell RCC and highlight tumor entities that might benefit from AR-targeted therapy.