Invasive apocrine carcinoma of the breast is an uncommon triple negative tumour that lacks a specific therapeutic target. Apocrine metaplasia of the breast shares common morphological features with apocrine carcinoma, and was previously found to consistently over-express claudin 1 and to lack claudin 4. This study was aimed at finding whether apocrine carcinoma, and other related apocrine breast lesions, have similar claudin profile. The immunohistochemical expression of claudin 1, 3 and 4 was studied in 11 cases of in situ and invasive apocrine breast carcinoma, 7 benign apocrine lesions and 45 consecutive morphologically non-apocrine triple negative breast carcinomas. All cases were also immunostained for Gross Cystic Disease Fluid Protein-15 (GCDFP-15), a marker for apocrine differentiation. Apocrine breast lesions maintained their expression pattern from benign through DCIS to invasive carcinoma; all showing strong expression of claudin 1 and 3 and absence of claudin 4. The same pattern of expression was seen in 2 out of the 45 morphologically non-apocrine tumours, but both showed strong positive staining for GCDFP-15. It is concluded that all benign and malignant apocrine lesions of the breast have a consistent pattern of claudin 1, 3 and 4 expression, suggesting the presence of a specific pathway for the development of invasive apocrine carcinoma. The overexpression of claudin 1 and 3 may have therapeutic implications as targets for managing apocrine cancers.
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