PReferentially Expressed Antigen in MElanoma Expression in Uterine and Ovarian Carcinosarcomas

Alaaeddin Alrohaibani & Ozlen Saglam et al. · 2023-11-13

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Carcinosarcoma (CS) is an aggressive form of gynecologic malignancy that accounts for ~5% of carcinomas in the endometrium and ovaries. There has been no significant improvement in survival over the last decades despite additional treatment options. PReferentially Expressed Antigen in MElanoma (PRAME) is an immunotherapy target used for the treatment of several solid tumors. We explored the PRAME protein expression levels in ovarian and uterine CS (n = 29). The expression levels were recorded by H-score (percentage of positively stained cells multiplied by staining intensity) in carcinomatous and sarcomatous components separately and compared by paired t-test. The marker expression levels of ovarian and uterine CS were tested against each other in the CS group. Sarcoma-predominant samples (>50% of the sampled tissue) were compared with samples without predominant sarcomatous components by a 2-sample pooled t-test. In addition, high-grade carcinomatous components of CS samples were tested against low-grade endometrioid carcinoma (International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics grades 1 and 2; n = 13), and sarcomatous components against uterine leiomyosarcoma (n = 14). There was no significant difference between any subgroups except for sarcomatous elements of CS and leiomyosarcoma (P < 0.001). A weak positive correlation was found between H-scores of carcinomatous and sarcomatous components (P = 0.062, r = 0.36). In the ovarian CS group, there was a moderate inverse correlation between age and the mean H-score of the carcinomatous component (r = −0.683, P = 0.02). Our results further support PRAME overexpression in gynecologic cancers, including CS with similar expression levels in epithelial and mesenchymal components. PRAME might have a role in epithelial-mesenchymal transition in this group of cancers.

TL;DR

The results further support PRAME overexpression in gynecologic cancers, including CS with similar expression levels in epithelial and mesenchymal components, and might have a role in epithelial-mesenchymal transition in this group of cancers.

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Authors
Alaaeddin Alrohaibani, Yun Yu, Lina Gao, Kimberly M. McLean, Jonathon Hetts, Ozlen Saglam