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Napsin A Expression in Subtypes of Thyroid Tumors: Comparison with Lung Adenocarcinomas.

Endocrine Pathology 2019 December 2
Napsin A is widely used in the diagnosis of lung adenocarcinoma and has also been reported to be positive in cases of thyroid carcinomas. We investigated napsin A levels through immunohistochemistry on whole sections of 210 primary thyroid tumors of various subtypes and another 41 metastatic thyroid carcinomas, and compared these with 125 primary and 25 metastatic lung adenocarcinomas. The results showed that napsin A was expressed in 23.8% thyroid tumors and 30.3% papillary thyroid carcinomas. Most cases showed a focal and weak to moderate expression. In comparison, 80.8% primary lung adenocarcinomas expressed napsin A, with mostly diffused and strong expression. For metastatic carcinomas of thyroid and lung origin, napsin A was detected in 39.0% of thyroid carcinomas in contrast to 88.0% in cases of lung adenocarcinomas. Comparisons of additional markers, TTF-1, CK7, thyroglobulin, and Pax-8 in metastatic carcinomas showed the overlapping expression of immunomarkers of TTF-1 and CK7. Thyroglobulin and Pax-8 were useful for distinguishing between metastatic carcinomas; however, Pax-8 may be a superior marker due to its higher sensitivity. The clinicopathological analysis of papillary thyroid carcinomas showed that the expression of napsin A was positively correlated with lymph node metastasis (p = 0.030). Here, we focused on the expression of napsin A in thyroid tumors and compared it with that in lung adenocarcinomas. The expression of napsin A is common in thyroid tumors and the combined expression of napsin A and TTF-1 in a metastatic thyroid carcinoma is a cause for concern due to chances of misdiagnosis as lung adenocarcinoma.

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