The Diagnostic and Prognostic Roles of Combined Expression of Novel Biomarkers in Lung Adenocarcinoma and Lung Squamous Cell Carcinoma: An Immunohistochemical Study

Iran J Pathol. 2021 Spring;16(2):162-173. doi: 10.30699/IJP.2020.130944.2452. Epub 2020 Dec 21.

Abstract

Background & objective: Diagnosis and discrimination of lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) from lung squamous cell carcinoma (LUSC) is critical to select the appropriate treatment regimen as recently targeted therapies require accurate subtyping of nonsmall-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLCs). There are currently several biomarkers that could be used for differentiation between LUAD and LUSC, but they have less sensitivity, specificity, and clinical applicability. The aim of this study was to assess the diagnostic and prognostic values of CLCA2, SPATS2, ST6GALNAC1, and Adipophilin tissue expression in the tissues retrieved from LUAD and LUSC patients using immunohistochemistry.

Methods: The current study was performed on the samples retrieved from sixty primary lung masses that were diagnosed as LUAD and LUSC. Immunohistochemistry was performed by using a panel of CLCA2, SPATS2, and ST6GALNAC1. We assessed the diagnostic roles of the studied markers in the discrimination between LUAD and LUSC and their prognostic values.

Results: SPATS2 and CLCA2 were expressed higher in LUSC than LUAD. ST6GALNAC1 and Adipophilin showed higher expression in LUAD than LUSC (P <0.001). The sensitivity and specificity of CLCA2, SPATS2, ST6GALNAC1 and Adipophilin in adequate subtyping and reaching the accurate diagnosis was 100%. We found only significant difference in survival rate between the patients with negative and positive CLCA2 expression (P=0.038 and P=0.019, respectively).

Conclusion: The combination of biomarkers of CLCA2, SPATS2, ST6GALNAC1, and Adipophilin may lead to an appropriate subtyping of lung cancer and reaching accurate diagnosis with the highest sensitivity and specificity.

Keywords: Diagnosis; Immunohistochemistry; Lung adenocarcinoma; Lung squamous cell carcinoma.