1 research outputs found
Concordance of lymphovascular invasion diagnosed in penile carcinoma with and without the immunohistochemical markers ERG and CD31
Lymphovascular invasion (LVI) is an
independent predictor of metastatic lymph node disease
in penile carcinoma and is one factor used to guide
clinical management. The presence of LVI with and
without the use of the endothelial immunohistochemical
(IHC) markers, ERG and CD31, was retrospectively
assessed in 46 penectomy cases containing invasive
penile carcinoma (43 squamous cell carcinoma and 3
non-squamous cell carcinoma). Concordance for the
detection of LVI between the original report, upon
pathology review, and with the use of IHC was
determined and histologic pitfalls were identified. For
penile squamous cell carcinoma, LVI was diagnosed in
27.9% of tumors in the original reports, 16.3% upon
pathology review, and in 16.3% with use of ERG and
CD31. Concordance of LVI identification in the original
report compared to IHC was 74.4% while concordance
of review compared to IHC was 95.3%. Using IHC data
as the reference, false positive LVI diagnoses were more
common in the original report than false negatives.
Histologic mimickers of LVI including involvement of
the penile corpora cavernosum or spongiosum
vasculature, seromucinous colonization, and a nested
pattern of tumor invasion were identified. We
demonstrated that it was not uncommon for LVI in
penile carcinoma to be overdiagnosed or
underdiagnosed. The use of endothelial IHC markers,
such as ERG or CD31, or additional pathology
consultation is recommended for penectomy cases in
which LVI is difficult to histologically discern