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Use of p63
expression in distinguishing primary and metastatic cutaneous
adnexal neoplasms from metastatic adenocarcinoma to skin.J
Cutan Pathol. 2007 Jun;34(6):474-80.
p63, a
recently identified homologue of the p53 gene, is mainly expressed
by basal and myoepithelial cells in skin. Others and we have shown
the value of p63 in distinguishing primary adnexal tumors from
visceral adenocarcinomas metastatic to skin. We now investigate the
pattern of p63 expression in metastases from skin adnexal carcinomas
and their cognate primaries and evaluate p63 expression in a larger
case series of malignant cutaneous adnexal neoplasms.
Immunohistochemical analysis for p63 was performed on 13 metastases
of adnexal carcinomas and their corresponding primary tumors. Twenty
visceral metastatic adenocarcinomas to the skin and 7 primary
mucinous carcinomas with cutaneous or visceral origin were compared.
The majority (90.9%) of primary adnexal tumors strongly expressed
p63 and their metastases labeled similar to their cognate primary
tumors. With one exception, primary or metastatic mucinous
carcinomas did not express p63. Metastases from two apocrine
carcinomas lacked p63 expression. All other cutaneous metastases
from internal adenocarcinomas were negative for p63. Analysis of p63
expression may assist in the differential diagnosis of primary
adnexal carcinomas versus metastatic visceral adenocarcinomas to the
skin. Metastases from adnexal carcinomas generally retain p63
expression similar to their associated primary tumors.
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