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Expression of CD44 variant exons by primary and metastatic oral squamous carcinomas
Author(s) -
Oliveira D. T.,
Sherriff M.,
Odell E. W.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of oral pathology and medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.887
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1600-0714
pISSN - 0904-2512
DOI - 10.1111/j.1600-0714.1998.tb01961.x
Subject(s) - grading (engineering) , pathology , cd44 , metastasis , exon , biology , stromal cell , epidermoid carcinoma , carcinoma , staining , primary tumor , squamous carcinoma , medicine , cancer , gene , cell , ecology , biochemistry , genetics
Abnormal CD44 expression in many neoplasms correlates with behaviour, but reports on its role in oral squamous carcinoma are contradictory. CD44 expression was characterised in a closely matched series of oral carcinomas with and without metastases in both frozen and formalin‐fixed tissue and correlated with behaviour and histological grading parameters. Eleven primary oral squamous carcinomas without metastases and nine primary carcinomas with 19 matched metastases were stained immunocytochemically for CD44H and products of variant exons v3, v4/5, v6 and v9. Patterns of staining in frozen and formalin‐fixed tissue were correlated with invasive front grading and behaviour using exact inferential statistics. Most primary carcinomas stained for all exons tested but some showed loss of expression of v4/5. Loss of expression was more marked in metastases, but there was no correlation between expression and behaviour or grade. Stromal surfaces of epithelial cells often expressed variant exon products reflecting loss of polarity. This, together with selective loss of v4 and v5 in primary carcinomas and their more frequent loss in metastases, suggests that CD44 may play a role in metastasis of some oral squamous carcinomas.