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Differential Expression of Androgen Receptor in Type I and Type II Endometrial Carcinomas: A Clinicopathological Analysis and Correlation with Outcome

OBJECTIVES: Endometrial carcinomas (EC) are the most common gynecological malignancies and are conventionally divided into type I and type II due to diagnostic and prognostic considerations. Female hormone expression in EC is extensively studied; however, data about androgen receptor (AR) expression...

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Autores principales: Abu Shahin, Nisreen, Aladily, Tariq, Abu Alhaj, Nezeen, Al-Khader, Ali, Alqaqa, Shefa, Aljaberi, Reyad, Amer, Lama, Elshebli, Sanad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: OMJ 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8015675/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33833869
http://dx.doi.org/10.5001/omj.2021.53
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author Abu Shahin, Nisreen
Aladily, Tariq
Abu Alhaj, Nezeen
Al-Khader, Ali
Alqaqa, Shefa
Aljaberi, Reyad
Amer, Lama
Elshebli, Sanad
author_facet Abu Shahin, Nisreen
Aladily, Tariq
Abu Alhaj, Nezeen
Al-Khader, Ali
Alqaqa, Shefa
Aljaberi, Reyad
Amer, Lama
Elshebli, Sanad
author_sort Abu Shahin, Nisreen
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Endometrial carcinomas (EC) are the most common gynecological malignancies and are conventionally divided into type I and type II due to diagnostic and prognostic considerations. Female hormone expression in EC is extensively studied; however, data about androgen receptor (AR) expression in EC are sparse. We aimed to study AR expression in different types of EC at our institute and whether it had an impact on patient outcomes. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of EC cases diagnosed and treated from 2010–2019. AR immunohistochemical expression was tested in 52 EC cases (type I = 40; type II = 12). Histological typing was verified according to conventional diagnostic criteria. Only primary EC were included without neoadjuvant therapy. Histologic score was calculated as: stain intensity (graded 0–3) × positive cells percentage (graded 0–4). Level of expression was scored from 0 to 12. RESULTS: The mean age of the selected patients was 60.3 years (range = 31–88 ± 12.6). Recurrence was detected in 11 (21.2%) patients. The outcome was 40 patients were alive without disease, eight alive with disease, three dead of disease, and one dead of other causes. About 62.5% of type I-EC and 25.0% of type II-EC were AR positive. AR expression was analyzed against different clinicopathological parameters including: type (p = 0.005), histotype (p = 0.044); grade (p = 0.035); age group (p = 0.207); menopause (p = 0.086); estrogen receptor (ER) expression (p = 0.284); atypical complex hyperplasia (p = 0.594); tumor stage (p = 0.994); tumor recurrence (p = 0.530); node status (p = 0.110); and outcome (p = 0.202). CONCLUSION: AR expression was higher in type I EC, endometrial endometrioid carcinoma histotype, and with a lower grade. AR expression was not significantly correlated with age, stage, ER, atypical hyperplasia, recurrence, node status, or outcome. Results agree with recent literature that AR expression is associated with better-differentiated EC and may be a potential hormonal therapeutic tool.
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spelling pubmed-80156752021-04-07 Differential Expression of Androgen Receptor in Type I and Type II Endometrial Carcinomas: A Clinicopathological Analysis and Correlation with Outcome Abu Shahin, Nisreen Aladily, Tariq Abu Alhaj, Nezeen Al-Khader, Ali Alqaqa, Shefa Aljaberi, Reyad Amer, Lama Elshebli, Sanad Oman Med J Original Article OBJECTIVES: Endometrial carcinomas (EC) are the most common gynecological malignancies and are conventionally divided into type I and type II due to diagnostic and prognostic considerations. Female hormone expression in EC is extensively studied; however, data about androgen receptor (AR) expression in EC are sparse. We aimed to study AR expression in different types of EC at our institute and whether it had an impact on patient outcomes. METHODS: A retrospective analysis of EC cases diagnosed and treated from 2010–2019. AR immunohistochemical expression was tested in 52 EC cases (type I = 40; type II = 12). Histological typing was verified according to conventional diagnostic criteria. Only primary EC were included without neoadjuvant therapy. Histologic score was calculated as: stain intensity (graded 0–3) × positive cells percentage (graded 0–4). Level of expression was scored from 0 to 12. RESULTS: The mean age of the selected patients was 60.3 years (range = 31–88 ± 12.6). Recurrence was detected in 11 (21.2%) patients. The outcome was 40 patients were alive without disease, eight alive with disease, three dead of disease, and one dead of other causes. About 62.5% of type I-EC and 25.0% of type II-EC were AR positive. AR expression was analyzed against different clinicopathological parameters including: type (p = 0.005), histotype (p = 0.044); grade (p = 0.035); age group (p = 0.207); menopause (p = 0.086); estrogen receptor (ER) expression (p = 0.284); atypical complex hyperplasia (p = 0.594); tumor stage (p = 0.994); tumor recurrence (p = 0.530); node status (p = 0.110); and outcome (p = 0.202). CONCLUSION: AR expression was higher in type I EC, endometrial endometrioid carcinoma histotype, and with a lower grade. AR expression was not significantly correlated with age, stage, ER, atypical hyperplasia, recurrence, node status, or outcome. Results agree with recent literature that AR expression is associated with better-differentiated EC and may be a potential hormonal therapeutic tool. OMJ 2021-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC8015675/ /pubmed/33833869 http://dx.doi.org/10.5001/omj.2021.53 Text en The OMJ is Published Bimonthly and Copyrighted 2021 by the OMSB. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial (CC BY-NC) 4.0 License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
spellingShingle Original Article
Abu Shahin, Nisreen
Aladily, Tariq
Abu Alhaj, Nezeen
Al-Khader, Ali
Alqaqa, Shefa
Aljaberi, Reyad
Amer, Lama
Elshebli, Sanad
Differential Expression of Androgen Receptor in Type I and Type II Endometrial Carcinomas: A Clinicopathological Analysis and Correlation with Outcome
title Differential Expression of Androgen Receptor in Type I and Type II Endometrial Carcinomas: A Clinicopathological Analysis and Correlation with Outcome
title_full Differential Expression of Androgen Receptor in Type I and Type II Endometrial Carcinomas: A Clinicopathological Analysis and Correlation with Outcome
title_fullStr Differential Expression of Androgen Receptor in Type I and Type II Endometrial Carcinomas: A Clinicopathological Analysis and Correlation with Outcome
title_full_unstemmed Differential Expression of Androgen Receptor in Type I and Type II Endometrial Carcinomas: A Clinicopathological Analysis and Correlation with Outcome
title_short Differential Expression of Androgen Receptor in Type I and Type II Endometrial Carcinomas: A Clinicopathological Analysis and Correlation with Outcome
title_sort differential expression of androgen receptor in type i and type ii endometrial carcinomas: a clinicopathological analysis and correlation with outcome
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8015675/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33833869
http://dx.doi.org/10.5001/omj.2021.53
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