Brief Reports
Copyright ©2005 Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.
World J Gastroenterol. Jun 21, 2005; 11(23): 3595-3600
Published online Jun 21, 2005. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v11.i23.3595
Differences in biological features of gastric dysplasia, indefinite dysplasia, reactive hyperplasia and discriminant analysis of these lesions
Bin Dong, Yu-Quan Xie, Ke Chen, Tao Wang, Wei Tang, Wei-Cheng You, Ji-You Li
Bin Dong, Yu-Quan Xie, Ke Chen, Wei Tang, Wei-Cheng You, Ji-You Li, Department of Pathology, Peking University School of Oncology, Beijing Institute for Cancer Research, Beijing Cancer Hospital, Beijing 100036, China
Tao Wang, Department of Epidemiology, Peking University School of Public Health, Beijing 100085, China
Author contributions: All authors contributed equally to the work.
Supported by the National Key Fundamental Research Project, No. G1998051203
Correspondence to: Ji-You Li, Department of Pathology, Peking University School of Oncology, Beijing Institute for Cancer Research, Beijing Cancer Hospital, Beijing 100036, China. lijiyou@263.net
Telephone: +86-10-88122450
Received: June 7, 2004
Revised: June 8, 2004
Accepted: June 29, 2004
Published online: June 21, 2005
Abstract

AIM: To investigate the differences in biological features of gastric dysplasia (Dys), indefinite dysplasia (IDys) and reactive hyperplasia (RH) by studying the biomarker alterations in cell proliferation, cell differentiation, cell cycle control and the expression of house-keeping genes, and further to search for markers which could be used in guiding the pathological diagnosis of three lesions.

METHODS: Expressions of MUC5AC, MUC6, adenomatous polyposis coli (APC), p53, Ki-67, proliferation cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and EGFR were studied by immunohistochemistry with a standard Envision technique in formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded specimens from 43 RH, 35 IDys, 35 Dys and 36 intestinal type gastric carcinomas (IGC). In addition, Bayes discriminant analysis was used to investigate the value of markers studied in differential diagnosis of RH, IDys, Dys and IGC.

RESULTS: The MUC5AC and MUC6 antigen expressions in RH, IDys, Dys and IGC decreased gradually (MUC5AC: 86.04%, 77.14%, 28.57%, 6.67%; MUC6: 65.15%, 54.29%, 20.00%, 25.00%, respectively). The expressions of the two markers had no significant difference between RH and IDys, but were all significantly higher than those of the other two lesions (MUC5AC: χ2 = 27.607, 38.027 and 17.33, 26.092; MUC6: χ2 = 16.54, 12.665 and 9.282, 6.737, P<0.01). There was no significant difference between RH and IDys, Dys and IGC in MUC6 expression. The APC gene expression in the four lesions had a similar decreasing tendency (RH 69.76%, IDys 68.57%, Dys 39.39%, IGC 22.86%), and it was significantly higher in the first two lesions than in the last two (χ2 = 7.011, 16.995 and 14.737, 19.817, P<0.05). The p53 expression in RH, IDys, Dys and IGC was 6.98%, 20%, 57.14% and 50%, respectively. There was no significant difference between RH and IDys or Dys and IGC, but the p53 expression in RH and IDys was significantly lower than that in Dys and IGC (χ2 = 7.011, 16.995 and 14.737, 19.817, P<0.01). The Ki-67 label index was significantly different among four lesions (RH: 0.298±8.92%, IDys: 0.358±9.25%, Dys: 0.498±9.03%, IGC: 0.620±10.8%, P<0.001). Positive immunostaining of PCNA was though observed in all specimens, significant differences were detected among four lesions (F = 95.318, P<0.01). In addition, we used Bayes discriminant analysis to investigate molecular pathological classification of the lesions, and obtained the best result with the combination of MUC5AC, Ki-67 and PCNA. The overall rate of correct classification was 67.4% (RH), 68.6% (IDys), 70.6% (Dys) and 84.8% (IGC), respectively.

CONCLUSION: Dys has neoplastic biological characteristics, while RH and IDys display hyperplastic characteristics. MUC5AC and proliferation-related biomarkers (Ki-67, PCNA) are more specific in distinguishing Dys from RH and IDys.

Keywords: Gastric dysplasia; Indefinite dysplasia; Reactive hyperplasia