Mismatch repair deficiency as a prognostic factor in mucinous colorectal cancer

There is some uncertainty about pathological grading of mucinous colorectal adenocarcinoma, defined as colorectal cancer demonstrating at least 50% mucinous differentiation. Under the WHO 2000 classification mucinous colorectal cancer was considered high grade. However under the current WHO 2010 cla...

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Veröffentlicht in:Modern pathology 2016-03, Vol.29 (3), p.266-274
Hauptverfasser: Andrici, Juliana, Farzin, Mahtab, Sioson, Loretta, Clarkson, Adele, Watson, Nicole, Toon, Christopher W, Gill, Anthony J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:There is some uncertainty about pathological grading of mucinous colorectal adenocarcinoma, defined as colorectal cancer demonstrating at least 50% mucinous differentiation. Under the WHO 2000 classification mucinous colorectal cancer was considered high grade. However under the current WHO 2010 classification microsatellite unstable/mismatch repair-deficient (MSI/MMRd) mucinous colorectal cancer is considered low grade, whereas microsatellite stable/mismatch repair proficient (MSS/MMRp) tumours are high grade. However there is little empirical evidence for this approach. We therefore compared the long term survival of patients with MSI/MMRd vs MSS/MMRp mucinous colorectal cancer in a large unselected cohort of patients undergoing surgery at our institution from 1998 to 2011. There were 2608 patients in the cohort, of which 264 (10.1%) were mucinous. 95 (36%) of the mucinous tumours were microsatellite unstable. The all-cause 5-year survival of mucinous MSI/MMRd colorectal cancer was similar to that of non-mucinous low-grade colorectal cancer (73 vs 67%, P =0.368), and significantly better than that of both non-mucinous high-grade (73 vs 53%, P
ISSN:0893-3952
1530-0285
DOI:10.1038/modpathol.2015.159