AI Article Synopsis

  • PRAME (Preferentially expressed antigen in melanoma) is valuable for distinguishing malignant melanoma from non-melanoma tumors, but recent studies show it also appears in various nonmelanocytic tumors, primarily based on mRNA research.* -
  • This study analyzed PRAME expression through immunohistochemistry in over 5,800 human tumors and found that while it was notable in certain malignancies like endometrial and ovarian cancers, it was also present in various other tumor types, making it a relatively unspecific marker.* -
  • Despite its lack of specificity for diagnostic purposes, the study suggests that immunohistochemistry for PRAME can effectively identify malignancies that may respond to immunotherapy treatments.*

Article Abstract

Preferentially expressed antigen in melanoma (PRAME) is considered a useful marker in the differential diagnosis between malignant melanoma and its melanocytic mimics. Recently PRAME expression was documented in nonmelanocytic tumors, but much of the data are based on mRNA studies. This investigation evaluated PRAME expression in the spectrum of normal tissues and >5800 human tumors using immunohistochemistry and EP461 monoclonal antibody. In normal tissues, PRAME was expressed in the testis and proliferative endometrium. In tumors, PRAME was variably expressed in malignancies of different lineages. Among epithelial tumors, >50% of PRAME-positive lesions were found among endometrial carcinomas (82%), uterine serous carcinomas (82%), uterine carcinosarcomas (60%), ovarian clear cell carcinomas (90%), ovarian serous carcinomas (63%), adenoid cystic carcinomas (81%), seminomas (78%), thymic carcinomas (75%), and basal cell carcinomas (62%). In mesenchymal and neuroectodermal malignancies, PRAME was frequently expressed in synovial sarcoma (71%), myxoid liposarcoma (76%), neuroblastoma (61%) and metastatic melanoma (87%). Also, PRAME was consistently expressed in 4 melanomas that lacked all melanoma markers including S100 protein and SOX10 but harbored typical for melanoma BRAF or NRAS driver mutations. However, strong and diffuse PRAME immunoreactivity was seen in many types of nonmelanocytic poorly differentiated carcinomas and sarcomas. Based on this study, PRAME is a relatively unspecific immunohistochemical marker, which limits its use in diagnostic surgical pathology. However, immunohistochemistry is a reliable and unexpensive method useful in detecting PRAME-positive malignancies for potential immunotherapy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9588667PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PAS.0000000000001944DOI Listing

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