Acute Radiation Colitis after Preoperative Short-Course Radiotherapy for Rectal Cancer: A Morphological, Immunohistochemical and Genetic Study

Preoperative radiotherapy is a widely accepted treatment procedure in rectal cancer. Radiation-induced changes in the tumor are well described, whereas less attention has been given to the non-neoplastic mucosa. Our aim is to provide a detailed analysis of the morphological features present in non-n...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancers 2020-09, Vol.12 (9), p.2571
Hauptverfasser: Zanelli, Magda, Ciarrocchi, Alessia, De Petris, Giovanni, Zizzo, Maurizio, Costantini, Massimo, Bisagni, Alessandra, Torricelli, Federica, Nicoli, Davide, Ramundo, Dafne, Ricci, Stefano, Palicelli, Andrea, Sanguedolce, Francesca, Ascani, Stefano, Castro Ruiz, Carolina, Annessi, Valerio, Zamponi, Raffaella, Bortesi, Mara, Martino, Veronica, Marchetti, Marialisa, De Marco, Loredana
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Preoperative radiotherapy is a widely accepted treatment procedure in rectal cancer. Radiation-induced changes in the tumor are well described, whereas less attention has been given to the non-neoplastic mucosa. Our aim is to provide a detailed analysis of the morphological features present in non-neoplastic mucosa that pathologists need to be familiar with, in order to avoid misdiagnosis, when evaluating rectal cancer specimens of patients preoperatively treated with radiotherapy, especially with short-course regimen. We compared 2 groups of 95 rectal cancer patients treated preoperatively with either short-course (45 patients) or long-course radiotherapy (50 patients). Depending on the type of protocol, different histopathological features, in terms of inflammation, glandular abnormalities and endocrine differentiation were seen in the non-neoplastic mucosa within the irradiated volume. Of note, features mimicking dysplasia, such as crypt distortion, nuclear and cytoplasmic atypia of glandular epithelium, were identified only in the short-course group. DNA mutation analysis, using a panel of 56 genes frequently mutated in cancer, and p53 immunostaining were performed on both tumor and radiation-damaged mucosa in a subset of short course cases. Somatic mutations were identified only in tumors, supporting the concept that tissues with radiation-induced “dysplastic-like” features are not genetically transformed. Pathologists should be aware of the characteristic morphological changes induced by radiation. The presence of features simulating dysplasia in the group treated with short-course radiotherapy may lead to serious diagnostic mistakes, if erroneously interpreted. Next generation sequencing (NGS) analysis further validated the morphological concept that radiation-induced abnormalities do not represent pre-neoplastic lesions.
ISSN:2072-6694
2072-6694
DOI:10.3390/cancers12092571