Ciliated Cells in Ovarian Cancer Decrease with Increasing Tumor Grade and Disease Progression

Michael T. Richardson & Sandra Orsulic et al. · 2022-12-11

4Citations

Ciliated cell markers expressed in epithelial ovarian cancers (EOC) are associated with improved survival. We examined the distribution of cells expressing ciliated cell markers in various EOC histologies and stages. Immunohistochemistry and/or multiplex immunofluorescence were used to determine the expression of FOXJ1 and/or CAPS (ciliated cell markers) in tissue microarrays including 4 normal fallopian tubes, 6 normal endometria, 16 cystadenomas, 25 borderline tumors, 21 low-grade carcinomas, and 118 high-grade carcinomas (HGSOC) (46 serous, 29 endometrioid, 30 clear cell, 13 mucinous). CAPS+ cells were observed in normal fallopian tubes and endometria and in ~85% of serous benign and borderline tumors and low-grade carcinomas but only in <40% of HGSOC. mRNA data from an independent cohort showed higher FOXJ1 and CAPS expression in serous borderline tumors and low-grade carcinomas compared to HGSOC. In HGSOC, ciliated cell-positive markers were observed in 52% primary tumors compared to 26% of patient-matched synchronous metastases, and 24% metachronous metastases (p = 0.009). mRNA data from an independent HGSOC cohort showed lower levels of CAPS in metastases than in primary tumors (p = 0.03). Overall, the study revealed that ciliated cells were less common in mucinous EOC, the percentage of ciliated cell marker-positive cases decreased with increasing grade, and the percentage of ciliated cells decreased in HGSOC metastases compared to patient-matched primary tumors.

Journal
Cells
TL;DR

Overall, the study revealed that ciliated cells were less common in mucinous EOC, the percentage of ciliated cell marker-positive cases decreased with increasing grade, and the percentage that decreased in HGSOC metastases compared to patient-matched primary tumors.

AI-generated by Semantic Scholar

Funding
Precancer Niche Formation in the Fallopian TubeClinical Protocol and Data Management (CPDM)UCLA Clinical and Translational Science InstituteUCLA Clinical and Translational Science InstituteUnited States Department of Veterans Affairs Merit Grant VA-ORD I01 BX004974United States Department of Veterans Affairs Merit Grant W81XWH2210631United States Department of Veterans Affairs Merit Grant UL1TR00188Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs through the Ovarian Cancer Research Program Grant VA-ORD I01 BX004974Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs through the Ovarian Cancer Research Program Grant W81XWH2210631Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs through the Ovarian Cancer Research Program Grant UL1TR00188Iris Cantor-UCLA Women’s Health Center/UCLA National Center of Excellence Grant VA-ORD I01 BX004974Iris Cantor-UCLA Women’s Health Center/UCLA National Center of Excellence Grant W81XWH2210631Iris Cantor-UCLA Women’s Health Center/UCLA National Center of Excellence Grant UL1TR00188Sandy Rollman Ovarian Cancer Foundation Grant VA-ORD I01 BX004974Sandy Rollman Ovarian Cancer Foundation Grant W81XWH2210631Sandy Rollman Ovarian Cancer Foundation Grant UL1TR00188Annenberg Foundation Grant VA-ORD I01 BX004974Annenberg Foundation Grant W81XWH2210631Annenberg Foundation Grant UL1TR00188Tina’s Wish Foundation Grant VA-ORD I01 BX004974Tina’s Wish Foundation Grant W81XWH2210631Tina’s Wish Foundation Grant UL1TR00188

NCI NIH HHS

P30 CA016042

NCATS NIH HHS

UL1 TR001881