Lymph vessels play an important role in tumor progression. Pulmonary adenocarcinomas, accounting for half of non-small-cell lung carcinomas, compose a spectrum of histological types, exclusively or without a lepidic growth pattern (LGP) along preserved interalveolar septa. In that context, this study was designed to investigate the lymphatic vascular pattern associated with LGP and the concomitant invasive component of pulmonary adenocarcinomas. Using the D2-40 monoclonal antibody as a marker of lymphatic endothelial cells, the lymphatic vessel density (LVD) and vessel-area fraction (LVAF) were morphometrically analyzed in four adenocarcinomas in situ (AIS) and the LGP of eight invasive adenocarcinomas (LPIA), and compared with their invasive pattern (IPIA). LVD in AIS (2.1 ± 0.7 mm(-2)) and LPIA (2.4 ± 1 mm(-2)) were significantly lower than that in IPIA (14.9 ± 13.6 mm(-2)) (p=0.001). Moreover, the lymphatic vascular pattern in LGP was similar to that of normal lung, with isolated small lymphatic vessels within the interalveolar septa. Our results showing the scarcity of lymphatics in LGP suggest an absence of septal lymphangiogenesis associated with the LGP pattern in lung adenocarcinomas, which could explain, at least partially, the better prognosis observed in tumors with exclusive or predominant lepidic spread compared with other subtypes.
Keywords: D2-40; adenocarcinoma; lepidic; lung; lymphangiogenesis.