© 2004 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & Association of Clinical Pathologists
SHORT REPORT
Reversal of glandular polarity in the lymphovascular compartment of breast cancer
1 Department of Histopathology, Derriford Hospital, Derriford Road, Plymouth PL6 8DH, UK
2 Department of Histopathology, Lincoln County Hospital, Greetwell Road, Lincoln LN2 5QY, UK
Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
Dr M Smith
Department of Histopathology, Derriford Hospital, Derriford Road, Plymouth PL6 8DH, UK; mark.smith{at}phnt.swest.nhs.uk
Aim: To investigate the polarity of breast invasive ductal carcinoma cells by comparing the polarity of the tumour located within lymphovascular spaces with that located in the extravascular compartment.
Methods: An immunohistochemical study identifying the apical HMFG-1, basolateral AUA-1, and basal laminin polarity markers of 11 cases of invasive ductal carcinoma (grades 1 or 2) metastatic to lymph nodes, all of which contained areas of tumour within and outside of lymphovascular spaces.
Results: Only one of 11 tumours had a focus of apparent reversed glandular polarity in the larger extravascular tumour compartment (with AUA-1 present internally and HMFG-1 expressed externally on tumour clumps), but six of the 11 tumours showed reversed glandular polarity (either with AUA-1, or HMFG-1, or both) within the very much smaller lymphovascular space tumour compartment. Laminin was not identified in association with lymphovascular tumour.
Conclusions: Reversed glandular polarity in invasive ductal breast carcinomas was identified and was significantly more frequent within vessels than outside of them. Reversal of tumour glandular polarity within lymphovascular spaces allows direct interaction between apical domain-type moleculeswhich are then aberrantly expressed on the external surface of tumour clumpsand lymphovascular endothelium. Such interactions may affect the establishment of metastatic disease.
Keywords: cell polarity; lymphovascular tumour
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