Literature DB >> 11443613

Patients with pseudomyxoma peritonei associated with disseminated peritoneal adenomucinosis have a significantly more favorable prognosis than patients with peritoneal mucinous carcinomatosis.

B M Ronnett1, H Yan, R J Kurman, B M Shmookler, L Wu, P H Sugarbaker.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Pseudomyxoma peritonei (PMP) is a poorly understood condition characterized by disseminated intraperitoneal mucinous tumors, often with mucinous ascites. The term PMP has been applied historically as a pathologic diagnostic term to both benign and malignant mucinous neoplasms that produce abundant extracellular mucin, resulting in a variable and poorly predictable prognosis. A recent study reported a pathologic classification that separated patients into prognostically distinct groups, but the follow-up was relatively short.
METHODS: Long-term follow-up data were analyzed for a previously reported series of 109 patients with PMP to examine the prognostic utility of a pathologic classification system that divided patients into three groups: disseminated peritoneal adenomucinosis (DPAM), peritoneal mucinous carcinomatosis (PMCA), and peritoneal mucinous carcinomatosis with intermediate or discordant features (PMCA-I/D). Patients whose tumors were classified 25 DPAM (n = 65 patients) had disease that was characterized by histologically bland to low-grade adenomatous mucinous epithelium associated with abundant extracellular mucin and fibrosis, often with an identifiable appendiceal mucinous adenoma that was the source of the peritoneal lesions. Patients whose tumors were classified 25 PMCA (n = 30 patients) had disease that was characterized by peritoneal lesions that displayed the cytologic and architectural features of mucinous carcinoma associated with extracellular mucin, often with an identifiable invasive mucinous adenocarcinoma of the gastrointestinal tract. Patients whose tumors were classified 25 PMCA-I (n = 11 patients) had peritoneal lesions that combined the features of DPAM and PMCA derived from well differentiated mucinous adenocarcinomas associated with adenomas. Patients whose tumors were classified 25 PMCA-D (n = 3 patients) had markedly atypical appendiceal adenomas associated with peritoneal lesions similar to PMCA.
RESULTS: Patients with DPAM had 5-year and 10-year survival rates of 75% and 68%, respectively (mean follow-up, 96 months; median follow-up, 104 months). Patients with PMCA and PMCA-I/D had a significantly worse prognosis, with 5-year and 10-year survival rates, respectively, of 50% and 21% for PMCA-I/D (mean follow-up, 58 months; median follow-up, 51 months) and 14% and 3% for PMCA (mean follow-up, 27 months; median follow-up, 16 months; P = 0.0001).
CONCLUSIONS: The term PMP should be used only as a clinical descriptor for patients who have the syndrome of mucinous ascites accompanied by a characteristic distribution of peritoneal mucinous tumors with the pathologic features of DPAM. DPAM should be used as a pathologic diagnostic term for patients with the bland peritoneal mucinous tumors associated with ruptured appendiceal mucinous adenomas and PMP. These patients should not be diagnosed with carcinoma, because they have disease that is distinct pathologically and prognostically from PMCA. Copyright 2001 American Cancer Society.

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Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11443613     DOI: 10.1002/1097-0142(20010701)92:1<85::aid-cncr1295>3.0.co;2-r

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer        ISSN: 0008-543X            Impact factor:   6.860


  74 in total

1.  [Unclear ascites in a young male patient].

Authors:  M Krix; I Dornacher; K H Seitz; H Schlemmer
Journal:  Radiologe       Date:  2004-01       Impact factor: 0.635

2.  Case records of the Massachusetts General Hospital. Case 19-2010. A 35-year-old man with adenocarcinoma of the cecum.

Authors:  David P Ryan; Jeffrey A Engelman; Cristina R Ferrone; Dushyant V Sahani; Mikhail Lisovsky
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2010-06-24       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  Pseudomyxoma peritonei.

Authors:  Katharine E Bevan; Faheez Mohamed; Brendan J Moran
Journal:  World J Gastrointest Oncol       Date:  2010-01-15

4.  High expression of RELP (Reg IV) in neoplastic goblet cells of appendiceal mucinous cystadenoma and pseudomyxoma peritonei.

Authors:  Kukka Heiskala; Jill Giles-Komar; Marja Heiskala; Leif C Andersson
Journal:  Virchows Arch       Date:  2005-12-02       Impact factor: 4.064

5.  The importance of gender in patients with peritoneal metastases of appendiceal origin treated by cytoreduction and intraperitoneal chemotherapy: an analysis of 257 consecutive patients from an Australian centre.

Authors:  Lawson Ung; Terence C Chua; David L Morris
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2014-03-21       Impact factor: 4.553

6.  Should We Be Doing Cytoreductive Surgery with HIPEC for Signet Ring Cell Appendiceal Adenocarcinoma? A Study from the US HIPEC Collaborative.

Authors:  Nick C Levinsky; Mackenzie C Morris; Koffi Wima; Jeffrey J Sussman; Syed A Ahmad; Jordan M Cloyd; Charles Kimbrough; Keith Fournier; Andrew Lee; Sean Dineen; Sophie Dessureault; Jula Veerapong; Joel M Baumgartner; Callisia Clarke; Mohammad Y Zaidi; Charles A Staley; Shishir K Maithel; Jennifer Leiting; Travis Grotz; Laura Lambert; Ryan J Hendrix; Sean Ronnekleiv-Kelly; Courtney Pokrzywa; Mustafa Raoof; Oliver S Eng; Fabian M Johnston; Jonathan Greer; Sameer H Patel
Journal:  J Gastrointest Surg       Date:  2019-08-19       Impact factor: 3.452

7.  Cytoreductive surgery and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy in the management of pseudomyxoma peritonei: A single-center experience.

Authors:  Ayman Zaki Azzam; Zyad Adil Alyahya; Ahmed Abbas Al Wusaibie; Tarek Mahmoud Amin
Journal:  Indian J Gastroenterol       Date:  2017-11-29

8.  Pseudomyxoma peritonei is a disease of MUC2-expressing goblet cells.

Authors:  Jerome T O'Connell; James S Tomlinson; Alice A Roberts; Kathryn F McGonigle; Sanford H Barsky
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  2002-08       Impact factor: 4.307

9.  Cytoreductive surgery and perioperative intraperitoneal chemotherapy: a new standard of care for appendiceal mucinous tumors with peritoneal dissemination.

Authors:  Paul H Sugarbaker
Journal:  Clin Colon Rectal Surg       Date:  2005-08

10.  Outcome of patients with aggressive pseudomyxoma peritonei treated by cytoreductive surgery and intraperitoneal chemotherapy.

Authors:  Alvaro Arjona-Sanchez; Francisco Cristobal Muñoz-Casares; Angela Casado-Adam; Juan Manuel Sánchez-Hidalgo; Maria Dolores Ayllon Teran; Rafael Orti-Rodriguez; Ana Cristina Padial-Aguado; Javier Medina-Fernández; Rosa Ortega-Salas; Gema Pulido-Cortijo; Auxiliadora Gómez-España; Sebastián Rufián-Peña
Journal:  World J Surg       Date:  2013-06       Impact factor: 3.352

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