Telomerase Activity in Pulmonary Neuroendocrine Tumors: Correlation With Histologic Subtype (ms-0060)

2000 
The authors measured telomerase activity using the telomeric repeat amplification protocol-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay method in 13 neuroendocrine pulmonary neoplasms and in non-neoplastic frozen lung samples from the same patients. These cases belonged to the complete neuroendocrine neoplastic spectrum: four typical carcinoids, three atypical carcinoids, four large cell neuroendocrine lung carcinomas, and two small cell lung carcinomas. The authors performed the same assay for 52 non-neoplastic lung tissues from the surgical files in their department (negative controls). They verified the presence (or absence) of neoplastic tissue in every case by looking at one frozen section done in the same tissue used for telomerase assay. The telomerase activity level in non-neoplastic tissues (mean, 182 A 450nm U) was similar to that obtained in the typical carcinoids (mean, 104.5 A 450nm U). All neuroendocrine tumors but the typical carcinoids showed high levels of telomerase activity (mean, 1,750.8 A 450nm U). According to the telomerase hypothesis, typical carcinoid cells are mortal pre-M2 stage cells, but atypical carcinoid, large cell neuroendocrine lung carcinoma, and small cell lung carcinoma cells are immortal post-M2 stage cells. This finding may be of important prognostic significance in these kinds of tumors. Measurement of enzyme activity with a good morphologic control could be necessary in telomerase activity assay.
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