Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma - American Journal of Clinical Pathology
Transcription
Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma - American Journal of Clinical Pathology
Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma: Antikeratin Immunohistochemistry and Electron Microscopy JEROME B. TAXY, M.D., DENISE F. HIDVEGI, M.D., AND HECTOR BATTIFORA, M.D. NASOPHARYNGEAL CARCINOMA (NPC) is a biologically distinct form of head and neck cancer occurring frequently in Oriental people and for which there are strong epidemiologic links to prior Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) exposure and certain HLA antigens.1821'26 In the United States, this tumor is far less common, representing less than 7% of all head and neck cancers.5 Using the WHO classification of NPC,25 the most common histologic variant both in Oriental and Western countries is undifferentiated carcinoma (UC). 6710 ' 26 which, by description and illustration, corresponds to what many surgical pathologists recognize as "lymphoepithelioma"26 (Table 1). Even in those studies not using the WHO classification, the least well-differentiated tumors constitute the majority of the cases. I ' 91219 Perhaps related both to the relative rarity of NPC Received May 9, 1984; accepted for publication May 31, 1984. Presented at the International Academy of Pathology, U.S.-Canadian Division, San Francisco, California, March, 1984. Supported in part by funding from the Nathan J. Reese Foundation. Address reprint requests to Dr. Taxy: Department of Pathology, Lutheran General Hospital, 1775 Dempster Street, Park Ridge, Illinois 60068. 320 Division of Pathology, Lutheran General Hospital, Park Ridge, Illinois, and the Department of Pathology, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois, and the Division of Anatomic Pathology, City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, California here and in other Western countries and the predominance of the UC type, the histopathologic diagnosis may be problematic. In one report of 33 cases, an incorrect initial diagnosis was made in 50% of the cases, lymphoma being the most frequent primary choice.9 This specific issue in differential diagnosis has been emphasized recently by a report of four cases in which a diagnosis of Hodgkin's Disease originally was favored.4 Although serologic titers of certain EBV antibodies are elevated in NPC patients, the practical diagnostic utility of these determinations is uncertain, and presently the resolution of the diagnosis still depends on tissue examination. Suggested special tissue studies have included the demonstration of EBV-DNA genomes,18 red blood cell adherence for A, B, and H antigens,10 and various histochemical stains,4 none of which has received much attention. Electron microscopy has been diagnostically useful in demonstrating desmosomes with or without tonofilaments, thereby establishing the epithelial nature of the tumor cells. 1315 The recent advent of immunohistochemistry and antikeratin antibody has proven useful in the diagnosis of a wide spectrum of epithelial tumors,8,16'20'22,23 including NPC. 1415 The staining technics as reported have varied with respect to fixation versus frozen section, employing enzymatic predigestion or not, as well as the length of incubation time of the tissue with the primary antikeratin antibody. To this list of variables should now also be added the avidin-biotin complex (ABC) technic of immunoperoxidase as opposed to immunofluorescence15 or the well-established peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) method. Further, the antisera in the published reports have been prepared by the respective authors and therefore have been restricted in their use. Currently, antikeratin antibodies are commercially available and potentially widely usable in diagnostic settings. Given the paucity of published standardized Downloaded from http://ajcp.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on October 12, 2016 Eighteen examples of nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), a tumor with potential diagnostic difficulty, were studied retrospectively. Using the WHO classification, 16 cases were undifferentiated carcinoma (UC). Immunohistochemistry for each tumor was performed on paraffin sections using two commercially available polyclonal antisera and a monoclonal antibody, AE-I. Method 1 used trypsinization, overnight incubation with the primary antibody and the avidin-biotin complex (ABC) technic. Method 2 used a 20-minute incubation with the primary antibody without trypsinization and employed the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) technic. Method 2 is the one most frequently employed by pathologists who use immunohistochemistry as a diagnostic aid. Method 1 gave clear positive results in each case with antibody AE-I and, in most cases, with the polyclonal antisera. Electron microscopy in 10 cases demonstrated desmosomes in each case and easily demonstrable tonofilaments in five. The results of this study indicate that in the diagnosis of UC, the most common variant of NPC, squamous differentiation can be documented readily by electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry for keratin proteins. With the latter, optimization of technic is essential for reliable results. (Key words: Nasopharyngeal carcinoma; Lymphoepithelioma; Immunohistochemistry; Desmosomes; Tonofilaments) Am J Clin Pathol 1985; 83: 320-325 NASOPHARYNGEAL CARCINOMA Vol. 83 • No. 3 results and technical approaches using these preparations, we report a retrospective study of 18 cases of NPC comparing two standard immunoperoxidase methods (PAP and ABC), using three antibody preparations and correlating the results with ultrastructural examination. The antibodies either are already or are soon to be available to practicing pathologists. We conclude that immunohistochemistry utilized as described here and conventional transmission electron microscopy are definitive and sensitive modalities in confirming the diagnosis of NPC. Materials and Methods Table 1. WHO Classification of Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma 1. Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC): Squamous differentiation in the form of kcratinization and/or intracellular bridges. 2. Nonkcratinizing carcinoma (NKC): Pavement-like or plexiform growth pattern in which cell borders are well defined; no squamous differentiation by light microscopy. 3. Undifferentiated carcinoma (UC): Syncytial growth of polygonal, occasionally spindled cells with vesicular nuclei, prominent nucleoli, indistinct cell borders, and associated with a lymphoid stroma. Tissue for electron microscopy, available in 13 cases, was fixed in glutaraldehyde and embedded in Epon®. Screening the thick sections excluded three cases in which tumor was not recovered. One representative block was prepared for ultrastructural examination in each of the remaining ten cases. Results Twelve males and six females, ranging from 21 to 65 years of age, constitute the patients in this study. There were no black patients, but three were Oriental and the remainder were white. Eight patients were younger than 35 years of age. Light microscopically there was 1 squamous cell carcinoma, 1 nonkeratinizing carcinoma, and 16 undifferentiated carcinomas. Immunohistochemically, clear positive staining, generally uniform in distribution, was exhibited by the tumor cells with monoclonal antibody AE-1 in all 18 cases. Approximately three-fourths of the polyclonal antibody treated sections gave negative reactions. In the one example of squamous cell carcinoma, one preparation yielded a positive reaction, while the second did not. Neither polyclonal antibody gave a positive reaction in the one nonkeratinizing carcinoma. Following restudy of the cases with the polyclonal antisera using Method 1, the reactions in general were much stronger, often approaching the intensity exhibited by AE-1 (Fig. 1). In general, the background did not consistently display the clarity observed with the monoclonal antibody. Using Method 1, the one case that was Zenker fixed failed to react with one polyclonal antibody but did react with the other. Table 2. Antikeratin Staining by Immunoperoxidase Method 1 Method 2 Monoclonal antibody Trypsinization Overnight incubation of primary antibody ABC technic Polyclonal antibody No enzymatic treatment 20-minute incubation of primary antibody PAP technic Downloaded from http://ajcp.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on October 12, 2016 Only NPC cases in which there was residual tumor tissue in the paraffin blocks were included in this study. Eighteen cases (7 nasopharyngeal biopsies and 11 metastatic lymph node excisions) were collected, of which 16 were fixed in 10% buffered neutral formalin and one each in B5 and Zenker's. Conventional hematoxylin and eosin stained sections were interpreted according to the WHO classification (Table 1). For immunohistochemistry, each case was studied with two polyclonal antisera prepared in rabbits from human stratum corneum (Dako Corporation, Santa Barbara, CA, and Ortho Diagnostics, Raritan, NJ) and a monoclonal mouse antibody, AE-1 (Hybritech, La Jolla, CA), also prepared from human calluses by hybridoma technics. AE-1 (AE being an abbreviation for antiepithelium) recognizes a spectrum of keratin classes including a 40,000-dalton class that is expressed by many types of epithelia and epithelial neoplasms, a 50,000-dalton keratin class that is common to all stratified squamous epithelia, and a 56,500-dalton class highly characteristic of keratinizing epithelium.17 The specifics of the two methods employed are listed in the Appendix, but the major differences are summarized in Table 2. Briefly, Method 1 initially was employed only with the monoclonal antibody and is an adaptation of the avidin-biotin-complex (ABC) method of Hsu and associates." There are two modifications. First, after quenching endogenous peroxidase activity but prior to applying nonimmune normal goat serum to remove nonspecific background staining, the tissue sections were treated with 0.1% trypsin. Second, the primary antibody was incubated with the tissue overnight. Method 2, used initially for both polyclonal antisera, is a standard PAP method, is suggested by both manufacturers in the package inserts, and is the method most likely to be adopted by the users of these products. Enzymatic treatment is not advised routinely and therefore was not employed; primary antibody incubations were 20 minutes. Subsequently, the polyclonal antisera were studied using Method 1. 321 322 TAXY, HIDVEGI, AND BATTIFORA A.J.C.P. • March 1985 Downloaded from http://ajcp.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on October 12, 2016 FIG. 1. A (upper, left). Nasopharyngeal biopsy from a 34-year-old man, demonstrating typical island of undifferentiated carcinoma with heavy lymphoid infiltrate. Hematoxylin and eosin (X400). B (upper, center). Section stained by Method 1 using monoclonal antibody AE-1. Dark linear bands of positive material within the cytoplasm. Immunoperoxidase (avidin-biotin complex) (X400). C and D (upper and center, right). Sections stained by Method 2 using each of the polyclonal antisera. No staining observed. Immunoperoxidase (peroxidase-antiperoxidase) (X400). E (lower, right). Section stained by Method 1 with one of the polyclonal antibodies demonstrating strong positivity. Similar result obtained with other polyclonal antiserum. Immunoperoxidase (avidin-biotin complex) (X400). FIG. 2 (lower, left). Undifferentiated carcinoma with tonofilaments and desmosomes (X4,000). Inset. Immunoperoxidase stain using AE-1 antibody, Method 1. Note linear distribution of staining perhaps reflecting distribution of desmosomes. Immunoperoxidase (avidin-biotin complex) (X400). NASOPHARYNGEAL CARCINOMA Vol. 83 • No. 3 The ten cases examined ultrastructurally were all UC. Each case had easily discernible intercellular junctions; however, tonofilaments were not identified in two cases and were found with difficulty in three other cases (Fig. 2). In five cases, tonofilaments were readily apparent. Discussion Being a retrospective study, 16 of the 18 cases were fixed in formalin and embedded in paraffin for periods ranging from one to eight years. It is an unfortunate aspect of immunoperoxidase regarding keratin antigens that formalin is probably the least desirable fixative, due, at least in part, to the masking effect of aldehyde linkages inherent in formalin fixation. Paraffin embedding also may contribute to this masking effect.21'22 However, the practice of surgical pathology undoubtedly will continue to rely on traditional methods of fixation and embedding, especially when small tissue fragments are submitted, as is to be expected from nasopharyngeal biopsies. Technical adjustments can be effective under these circumstances. Alternatively, the potential deleterious effects may be avoided by using frozen sections and/or ethanol fixation, which have given technically superior and more sensitive results. 215-2 ' The key elements in the success of Method 1 were, we believe, trypsinization and the ABC technic. Enzymatic digestion has been used to reduce aldehyde linkages and has been suggested by several authors as well as the manufacturers of the polyclonal antibodies in instances in which the routine procedure fails to demonstrate positive keratin staining.3-81516-20'22 We suggest that this step be made part of routine procedure. Trypsinization was used here in Method 1, initially with the monoclonal antibody and later with both polyclonal antisera. The resulting demonstration of positive staining with the latter indicates the value of this step. The two methods employed in this study, i.e., PAP and ABC, were chosen because they are the two most widely used by practicing pathologists. In this study, however, neither AE-1 nor trypsinization was used with Method 2. The reasons for this decision were based first, on the empiric observation that ABC is a method in which the sensitivity of the antibody is greatly enhanced,'' second, this method is also best suited for use with monoclonal antibodies. Since monoclonal antibodies are usually of murine origin, their use with the PAP technic would require mouse PAP, an expensive and not readily obtainable reagent. When Method 1 employing ABC was used with the polyclonal antisera, the quality and sensitivity of the reactions was enhanced maximally. This was especially apparent in the majority of cases, which were initially negative with Method 2. The consistent positive reactions with striking background clarity with the monoclonal antibody resulted in slides that were interpreted more easily. This was the chief advantage of this preparation over the polyclonal antibodies. Nevertheless, the general enhancement of the reactions of the polyclonal antibodies by Method 1 indicates that they may be applied effectively in the diagnosis of UC. Incubation times with the primary antibody have varied, with 20 minutes, recommended by the manufacturer of the polyclonal antibodies, and 30 minutes, 2 hours, or overnight times being reported.816'20-23-24 Testing for the monoclonal antibody used in this study has shown that overnight incubation will ensure optimal sensitivity. Shorter incubation times, e.g., 60 minutes, can of course be tried if duplicate slides are run. At the end of a 60-minute incubation, one slide can be stained and viewed. If positive, the overnight incubation can be discontinued. The present report demonstrates that, despite the undifferentiated histologic features of most cases of NPC, the early demonstrable expression of the ultrastructural and immunohistochemical development of squamous features is quite advanced. Electron microscopy of this tumor is an established modality in demonstrating desmosomes with or without intracytoplasmic tonofilaments.13 The ten cases here, each with desmosomes and five with easily recognized tonofilaments, support this observation. Since only one representative block of tumor was cut for examination in the electron microscope, the results suggest that sampling for ultrastructural study is not an issue in NPC provided that neoplastic cells are present on the thick sections. Furthermore, UC is one of the few instances in which the electron microscopic examination is quick and definitive. If obvious desmosomes are not readily apparent, the Downloaded from http://ajcp.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on October 12, 2016 Lymphoepithelioma is a term well recognized by surgeons and pathologists in the diagnosis of NPC. The histologic picture it connotes, e.g., & poorly differentiated or undifferentiated carcinoma with a prominent lymphoid infiltrate, is sufficiently distinctive to have been adapted for poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinomas primary in the thymus, the most common variant of thymic carcinoma, which is histologically identical with its NPC counterpart.27 In the nasopharynx, UC is basically a squamous carcinoma and must be distinguished from varieties of lymphoma, although occasionally melanoma or rhabdomyosarcoma may be considered. The results of this study emphasize the important and complementary ancillary roles of immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy in resolving the differential diagnosis. 323 A.J.C.P. • March 1985 TAXY, HIDVEGI, AND BATTIFORA 324 Acknowledgments. The authors acknowledge the technical assistance of Abbyann Sisk and Mary Kopinski and the clerical assistance of Susan Diederich. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. References 1. Baker SR, Wolfe RA: Prognostic factors of nasopharyngeal malignancy. Cancer 1982; 49:163-169 2. Battifora H, Sheibani K, Tubbs RR, Kopinski MI, Sun TT: Antikeratin antibodies in tumor diagnosis: Distribution between seminoma and embryonal carcinoma. Cancer 1984; 54:843848 3. Bourne JA: Handbook of immunoperoxidase staining methods. Santa Barbara, Dako Corporation, 1983 4. Carbone A, Micheau C: Pitfalls in microscopic diagnosis of undifferentiated carcinoma of nasopharyngeal type (lymphoepithelioma). Cancer 1982; 50:1344-1351 5. Decker J, Goldstein JC: Current concepts in otolaryngology: Risk factors in head and neck cancer. N Engl J Med 1982; 306:11511155 6. Easton JM, Levine PH, Connelly RR, Day NE: Studies on nasopharyngeal carcinoma in the United States: A model for international comparison. Comp Immun Microbiol Infect Dis, vol 2. Great Britain, Pergamon Press, Ltd., 1979, pp 221-228 7. Easton JM, Levine PH, Hyams VJ: Nasopharyngeal carcinoma in the United States: A pathologic study of 177 U.S. and 30 foreign cases. Arch Otolaryngol 1980; 106:88-91 8. Espinoza CG, Azar HA: Immunohistochemical localization of keratin-type proteins in epithelial neoplasms: Correlation with 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. electron microscopic findings. Am J Clin Pathol 1982; 78:500507 _ Giffle'r RF, Gillespie JJ, Ayala AG, Newland JR: Lymphepithelioma in cervical lymph nodes of children and young adults. Am J Surg Pathol 1977; 1:293-302 Gupta RK: Isoantigens, A, B, H(O) in nasopharyngeal carcinoma. Cancer 1983;51:256-259 Hsu SM, Rami L, Fanger H: Use of avidin-biotin peroxidase complex (ABC) in immunoperoxidase techniques: A comparison between ABC and unlabeled antibody (PAP) procedures. J Histochem Cytochem 1981;29:577-580 Jenkin RDT, Anderson JR, Jereb B, et al.: Nasopharyngeal carcinoma: A retrospective review of patients less than thirty years of age: A report from children's cancer study group. Cancer 1981;47:360-366 Lin HS, Liu CS, Yeh S, Tu SM: Fine structure of nasopharyngeal carcinoma with special reference to the anaplastic type. Cancer 1969; 23:390-405 Madri J A, Barwick KW: An immunohistochemical study of nasopharyngeal neoplasms using keratin antibodies: Epithelial vs. nonepithelial neoplasms. Am J Surg Pathol 1982; 6:143-149 Miettinen M, Lehto VP, Virtanen I: Nasopharyngeal lymphoepithelioma: Histological diagnosis as aided by immunohistochemical demonstration of keratin. Virchows Arch Cell Pathol 1982; 40:163-169 Nagle RB, McDaniel KM, Clark VA, Payne CM: The use of antikeratin antibodies in the diagnosis of human neoplasm. Am J Clin Pathol 1983; 79:458-466 Nelson WG, Sun TT: The 50 and 58-kdalton keratin classes as molecular markers for stratified squamous epithelia: Cell culture studies. J Cell Biol 1983; 97:244-251 Pearson GR, Weiland LH, Neel HB III, et al: Application of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) serology to the diagnosis of North American nasopharyngeal carcinoma. Cancer 1983; 51:260268 Pick T, Mauer HM, McWilliams NB: Lymphoepithelioma in childhood. J Pediatr 1974; 84:96-100 Ramaekers F, Puts J, Moesker O, Kant A, Jap P, Vooijs P: Demonstration of keratin in human adenocarcinomas. Am J Pathol 1983; 111:213-223 Ringborg V, Henle W, Henle G, et al: Epstein-Barr virus specific serodiagnostic tests in carcinomas of the head and neck. Cancer 1983;52:1237-1243 Said JW: Immunohistochemical localization of keratin proteins in tumor diagnosis. Hum Pathol 1983; 14:1017-1019 Schlegel R, Banks-Schlegel S, McLeod JA, Pinkus GS: Immunoperoxidase localization of keratin in human neoplasm. Am J Pathol 1980; 101:41-50 Schlegel R, Banks-Schlegel S, Pinkus G: Immunohistochemical localization of keratin in normal human tissues. Lab Invest 1980; 42:91-96 Shanmugaratnam K, Sobin LH: Histological typing of upper respiratory tract tumors, International histological classification of tumors, No 19, WHO, Geneva, 1978, p 32-33 Shanmugaratnam K, Chan SH, de-The G, et al: Histopathology of nasopharyngeal carcinoma: Correlations with epidemiology, survival rates and other biological characteristics. Cancer 1979; 44:1029-1044 Wick MR, Scheithauer BW, Weiland LH, Bernatz PE: Primary thymic carcinomas. Am J Surg Pathol 1982; 6:613-630 APPENDIX Method 1 1. Cut paraffin section 4 - 6 /urn thick and apply to glue covered slides (5% Elmer's® glue). Dry at 60 °C overnight. 2. Deparaffinize in two changes of xylene (5 minutes each) and two changes of 100% ethanol (ten dips each). Downloaded from http://ajcp.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on October 12, 2016 tumor is most likely something other than UC. Lastly, and perhaps most important for pathologists attempting to correlate the ultrastructure with the immunohistochemistry, the absence of tonofilaments does not preclude positive immunologic staining for keratin. The success of immunohistochemistry in this or any tumor may be related to the nature of the keratin antigen(s) being expressed as well as the technics employed to stain it (them).22 Although the exact identity of the antigen(s) being stained in UC is not known, it has been established that AE-1 antibody recognizes three keratin classes: a 40,000-dalton class present in all epithelia except epidermis, 50,000-dalton class common to all stratified epithelia, and a 56,000-dalton class associated with keratinizing epithelium.17 The polyclonal preparations are, as this study shows, also capable of recognizing one or more of these antigens. However, both polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies require the technical modifications as outlined in Method 1. In most examples of this tumor, it is possible that one or more of these keratin classes are more readily polymerized as aggregated so that they are ultrastructurally recognizable as tonofilaments. From the practical viewpoint, antikeratin staining and electron microscopy can provide definitive information in the diagnosis of NPC. Immunoperoxidase is cheaper and requires no special equipment. Both modalities are widely available, are technically easy, are relatively rapid, and provide permanent records of examination. Vol. 83 • No. 3 NASOPHARYNGEAL CARCINOMA 325 Method 2 1. Cut sections, as in Method 1. 2. Deparaffinize and hydrate to distilled H 2 0. 3. Incubate slides with 3% H 2 0 2 in methanol, 5 minutes. 4. PBS, 5 minutes. 5. Normal sheep serum (1:5), 20 minutes. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. Antikeratin (1:150), 20 minutes. PBS, 5 minutes. Swine anti-rabbit globulin (1:100), 20 minutes. PBS, 5 minutes. PAP (1:100), 20 minutes. PBS, 5 minutes. DAB chromogen, 10 minutes. H2Q rinse. Counterstain, Mayer's Hematoxylin 10 minutes. Wash in tap H 2 0, 10 minutes. 16. Coverslip. Downloaded from http://ajcp.oxfordjournals.org/ by guest on October 12, 2016 3. Incubate slides with 6% H 2 0 2 in methanol, room temperature, 30 minutes. 4. Rinse in distilled water and follow by wash in PBS (phosphate-buffered saline, pH 7.3), 5 minutes. 5. Trypsinize (0.1% trypsin in PBS), 37 °C for 60 minutes. 6. Wash with distilled H 2 0-PBS. , 7. Normal goat serum (1:20), 20 minutes. 8. Antikeratin (1:300), room temperature, overnight. 9. PBS, 5 minutes. 10. Biotinylated horse anti-mouse (1:1000), room temperature, 60 minutes. 11. PBS, 5 minutes. 12. ABC, room temperature, 60 minutes (Vectastain® ABC kit, Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). 13. PBS, 5 minutes. 14. DAB (diaminobenzidine) chromogen, 10 minutes. 15. PBS, 5 minutes. 16. Counterstain with Mayer's Hematoxylin, 10 minutes. 17. Wash in tap water, coverslip.