Clear Cell Tumor of the Lung Immunohistochemical and Ultrastructural Evidence of Melanogenesis

Abstract
Clear cell tumors of the lung (CCTL) are rare neoplasms of uncertain differentiation. A previous study of eight CCTL demonstrated a lack of epithelial features, but their exact nature remained unknown. In the current study of nine CCTL, immunohistochemistry using preliminary enzymatic digestion showed strong reactivity with the antimelanocytic markers HMB-45 (seven cases) and HMB-50 (six cases) and focal positivity for S-100 (nine cases), neuron-specific enolase (three cases), synaptophysin (one case), and Leu-7 (one case). Staining for cytokeratin, epithelial membrane antigen, chromogranin, and glial fibrillary acid protein was uniformly negative. Frozen-section immunoreactivity for vimentin and the antimelanocytic monoclonal preparation NKI/BETEB was noted in the one CCTL for which snap-frozen tissue was available. Ultrastructural examination of three glutaraldehyde-fixed CCTL showed rare neoplastic cells containing the full spectrum of melanosomes in two, one of which also contained neurosecretory-type granules. Aberrant melanosomal forms were identified in the third case. Melanosomes were not identified in the remaining five CCTL studied from formalin- or paraffin-retrieved material. The findings indicate that CCTL exhibits melanocytic differentiation. This feature may be of considerable value in distinguishing CCTL from other clear cell neoplasms.