Overexpression of Mesothelin in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma (PDAC)
Abstract
Purpose: Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) with difficulty in early diagnosis does not respond
well to conventional treatments and has not occurred significant improvement in the overall 5-year
survival rates. Mesothelin (MSLN) is a tumor differentiation antigen expressed in several solid neoplasms
and a limited number of healthy tissues. Its selective expression on malignant cells makes it an interesting
candidate for investigation as a diagnostic and prognostic biomarker and as a therapeutic target. In this
study, we detected the expression of MSLN in PDAC and analyzed the correlation between the
expression of MSLN and clinicopathological data, so as to provide more theoretical basis for the role of
MSLN in the diagnosis and treatment of PDAC.
Patients and methods: Cancer and para-cancer tissues of 24 cases with PDAC were assessed by
standardized immunohistochemical (IHC) detection with two kinds of anti-MSLN antibodies (EPR4509
and EPR19025-42) to detect their positive expression rates and study the correlation between the
expression of MSLN and the clinicopathological data.
Results: The two anti-MSLN antibodies of cancer tissues showed positive expression with tan yellow or
tan brown granules diffusely distributed on the cell membrane in 22 of 24 cases with PDAC (positive rate
of 91.67%), and the positive expression of the two antibodies EPR4509 and EPR19025-42 was completely
consistent in all tissue samples. No expression of the two anti-MSLN antibodies was found in para-cancer
tissues and the difference was statistically significant (χ2=40.615, p=0.000, p<0.05) when compared with
PDAC tissues. There was no significant correlation between MSLN expression and clinicopathological
data, such as gender, tumor size, location, pathological stage, differentiation degree and lymph node
metastasis (p>0.05).
Conclusion: MSLN was highly expressed in PDAC tissues, but not in paracancerous tissues. There was
no significant correlation between MSLN expression and clinicopathological factors. The overexpression
of MSLN may have promising prospects in diagnosis, targeted therapy and immunotherapy of PDAC