Diagnostic Potential of CD44, CD133, and VDR in Epithelial Ovarian Tumors: Association with Histopathology Parameters
Ljubiša Jovanović, Branka Šošić-Jurjević, Anđa Ćirković, Sandra Dragičević, Branko Filipović, Svetlana Milenković, Stefan Dugalić, Miroslava Gojnić-Dugalić, Aleksandra Nikolić

TL;DR
This study explores how CD44, CD133, and VDR expression levels in ovarian tumors can help diagnose cancer and understand tumor behavior.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct expression patterns of CD44, CD133, and VDR across different ovarian tumor types, suggesting their potential as diagnostic markers.
Findings
CD44 and VDR are significantly higher in malignant ovarian tumors compared to benign and atypical proliferative tumors.
CD133 expression is highest in atypical proliferative tumors.
CD44, CD133, and VDR show moderate positive correlations and significant associations with tumor grade and stage.
Abstract
Cancer stem cells (CSCs) significantly contribute to heterogeneity, malignancy, and therapy resistance in ovarian cancer. Recent studies emphasize the role of the vitamin D receptor (VDR) in regulating cell differentiation and stemness in various types of cancer. This study aims to determine the expression levels of CD44, CD133, and VDR in epithelial ovarian tumors (EOTs) and to compare these levels across different tumor types, including benign, atypical proliferative tumors, and five types of malignant phenotypes, in order to evaluate their potential as diagnostic tools for malignancy. Tissue samples from 218 patients diagnosed with EOT were analyzed. Clinical and histopathologic parameters were recorded. Quantitative immunohistochemical tissue microarray analysis was used to assess the expression levels of CD44, CD133, and VDR using two different scoring systems. Comparisons were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer Cells and Metastasis · Renal and related cancers · Ovarian cancer diagnosis and treatment
