| Literature DB >> 21061133 |
Phil Quirke1, Mauro Risio, René Lambert, Lawrence von Karsa, Michael Vieth.
Abstract
In Europe, colorectal cancer is the most common newly diagnosed cancer and the second most common cause of cancer deaths, accounting for approximately 436,000 incident cases and 212,000 deaths in 2008. The potential of high-quality screening to improve control of the disease has been recognized by the Council of the European Union who issued a recommendation on cancer screening in 2003. Multidisciplinary, evidence-based European Guidelines for quality assurance in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis have recently been developed by experts in a pan-European project coordinated by the International Agency for Research on Cancer. The full guideline document consists of ten chapters and an extensive evidence base. The content of the chapter dealing with pathology in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis is presented here in order to promote international discussion and collaboration leading to improvements in colorectal cancer screening and diagnosis by making the principles and standards recommended in the new EU Guidelines known to a wider scientific community.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21061133 PMCID: PMC3016207 DOI: 10.1007/s00428-010-0977-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virchows Arch ISSN: 0945-6317 Impact factor: 4.064
Adaptation of the revised Vienna classification for colorectal cancer screening
| 1. No neoplasiaa |
| Vienna category 1 (negative for neoplasia) |
| 2. Mucosal low-grade neoplasia |
| Vienna category 3 |
| Mucosal low-grade neoplasia |
| Low-grade adenoma |
| Low-grade dysplasia |
| Other common terminology |
| Mild and moderate dysplasia |
| WHO: low-grade intraepithelial neoplasia |
| 3. Mucosal high-grade neoplasia |
| Vienna: category 4.1–4.4 |
| Mucosal high-grade neoplasia |
| High-grade adenoma/dysplasia |
| Non-invasive carcinoma (carcinoma in situ) |
| Suspicious for invasive carcinoma |
| Intramucosal carcinoma |
| Other common terminology |
| Severe dysplasia |
| High-grade intraepithelial neoplasia |
| WHO: high-grade intraepithelial neoplasia |
| TNM: pTis |
| 4. CARCINOMA invading the submucosa or beyond |
| 4a. Carcinoma confined to submucosa |
| Vienna: category 5 (Submucosal invasion by carcinoma) |
| TNM: pT1 |
| 4b. Carcinoma beyond submucosa |
| TNM: pT2-T4 |
For revised Vienna classification, see Ref. [26]; for WHO classification, see Ref. [23]; and for TNM, see [40–42]
aCategory 2 of the Vienna Classification (indefinite) is not recommended for screening
Fig. 1Kikuchi levels of submucosal infiltration modified from Ref. [51]
Fig. 2Haggitt levels of invasion in polypoid carcinomas
Modified Dukes stage
| Dukes A | Tumour penetrates into but not through the muscularis propria (the muscular layer) of the bowel wall |
| Dukes B | Tumour penetrates into and through the muscularis propria of the bowel wall but does not involve lymph nodes |
| Dukes C | C1: There is pathological evidence of adenocarcinoma in one or more lymph nodes but not the highest node |
| C2: There is pathological evidence of adenocarcinoma in the lymph node at the high surgical tie | |
| Stage D | Tumour has spread to other organs (such as the liver, lung or bone) |
TNM classification of tumours of the colon and rectum
| Clinical classification | 5th edition (1997) | 6th edition (2002) | 7th edition (2009) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T—primary tumour | |||||
| TX | Primary tumour cannot be assessed | + | + | + | |
| T0 | No evidence of primary tumour | + | + | + | |
| Tis1 | Carcinoma in situ: intraepithelial or invasion of lamina propria | + | + | + | |
| T1 | Tumour invades submucosa | + | + | + | |
| T2 | Tumour invades muscularis propria | + | + | + | |
| T3 | Tumour invades through muscularis propria into subserosa or into non-peritonealised pericolic or perirectal tissues | + | + | + | |
| T42,3 | Tumour directly invades into other organs or structures and/or perforates visceral peritoneum | + | + | + | |
| T4a | Perforates visceral peritoneum | – | – | + | |
| T4b | Directly invades other organ or structures | – | – | + | |
| N—regional lymph nodes | |||||
| NX | Regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed | + | + | + | |
| N0 | No regional lymph node metastasis | + | + | + | |
| N1 | Metastasis in 1 to 3 regional lymph nodes | + | + | + | |
| N1a | 1 node | – | – | + | |
| N1b | 2–3 nodes | – | – | + | |
| N1c | Satellites4 in subserosa, without regional nodes | – | – | + | |
| N2 | Metastasis in 4 or more regional lymph nodes | + | + | + | |
| N2a | 4–6 nodes | – | – | + | |
| N2b | 7 or more nodes | – | – | + | |
| M—distant metastasis | |||||
| MX | Distant metastasis cannot be assessed | + | + | – | |
| M0 | No distant metastasis | + | + | + | |
| M1 | Distant metastasis | + | + | + | |
| M1a | Metastasis confined to one organ (liver, lung, ovary, non-regional lymph node(s)) | – | – | + | |
| M1b | Metastasis in more than one organ or the peritoneum | – | – | + | |
TNM stage grouping of tumors
| Stage | Stage grouping | 5th Edition (1997) | 6th Edition (2002) | 7th Edition (2009) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T | N | M | ||||
| Stage 0 | Tis | N0 | M0 | + | + | + |
| Stage I | T1,T2 | N0 | M0 | + | + | + |
| Stage II | T3,T4 | N0 | M0 | – | – | + |
| Stage IIA | T3 | N0 | M0 | + | + | + |
| Stage IIB | T4 | N0 | M0 | + | + | – |
| Stage IIB | T4a | N0 | M0 | – | – | + |
| Stage IIC | T4b | N0 | M0 | – | – | + |
| Stage III | Any T | N1, N2 | M0 | – | – | + |
| Stage IIIA | T1,T2 | N1 | M0 | + | + | + |
| Stage IIIA | T1,T2 | N1c | M0 | – | – | + |
| Stage IIIA | T1 | N2a | M0 | – | – | + |
| Stage IIIB | T3,T4 | N1 | M0 | + | + | – |
| Stage IIIB | T3,T4a | N1/N1c | M0 | – | – | + |
| Stage IIIB | T2,T3 | N2a | M0 | – | – | + |
| Stage IIIB | T1,T2 | N2b | M0 | – | – | + |
| Stage IIIC | Any T | N2 | M0 | + | + | – |
| Stage IIIC | T4a | N2a | M0 | – | – | + |
| Stage IIIC | T3,T4a | N2b | M0 | – | – | + |
| Stage IIIC | T4b | N1, N2 | M0 | – | – | + |
| Stage IV | Any T | Any N | M1 | + | + | – |
| Stage IVA | Any T | Any N | M1a | – | – | + |
| Stage IVB | Any T | Any N | M1b | – | – | + |
T tumour, N node, M metastasis
Notes
| No. | Notes | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 5th edition | 6th edition | 7th edition | |
| 1 | Tis includes cancer cells confined within the glandular basement membrane (intraepithelial) or lamina propria (intramucosal) with no extension through muscularis mucosae into the submucosa. Note: the authors of the European Guidelines for quality assurance in pathology in CRC screening and diagnosis recommend not using this category. Respective lesions should be reported as mucosal high-grade neoplasia, see above (“ | ||
| 2 | Direct invasion in T4 includes invasion of other segments of the colon or rectum by way of the serosa, e.g. invasion of sigmoid colon by a carcinoma of the cecum | Direct invasion in T4b includes invasion of other organs or segments of the colon or rectum by way of the serosa, as confirmed on microscopic examination, or for tumours in a retroperitoneal or subperitoneal location, direct invasion of other organs or structures by virtue of extension beyond the muscularis propria | |
| 3 | Tumour that is adherent to other organs or structures, macroscopically, is classified T4. However, if no tumour is present in the adhesion, microscopically, the classification should be pT3 | Tumour that is adherent to other organs or structures, macroscopically, is classified cT4b. However, if no tumour is present in the adhesion, microscopically, the classification should be pT1–T3, depending on the anatomical depth of wall invasion | |
| 4 | A tumour nodule greater than 3 mm in diameter in perirectal or pericolic adipose tissue without histological evidence of a residual lymph node in the nodule is classified as regional lymph node metastasis. However, a tumour nodule up to 3 mm in diameter is classified in the T category as discontinuous extension i.e. T3. | A tumour nodule in the pericolic/perirectal adipose tissue without histological evidence of a residual lymph node in the nodule is classified in the pN category as a regional lymph node metastasis if the nodule has the form and smooth contour of a lymph node. If the nodule has an irregular contour it should be classified in the T category and also coded as V1 (microscopic venous invasion) or V2, if it was grossly evident, because there is a strong likelihood that it represents venous invasion | Tumour deposits (satellites), i.e. macroscopic or microscopic nests or nodules, in the pericolorectal adipose tissue’s lymph drainage area of a primary carcinoma without histological evidence of residual lymph node in the nodule, may represent discontinuous spread, venous invasion with extra-vascular spread (V1/2) or a totally replaced lymph node (N1/2). If such deposits are observed with lesions that would otherwise be classified as T1 or T2, then the T classification is not changed, but the nodule is recorded as N1c. If a nodule is considered by the pathologist to be a totally replaced lymph node (generally having a smooth contour), it should be recorded as a positive lymph node and not as a satellite, and each nodule should be counted separately as a lymph node in the final pN determination. (Note of the authors of the European Guidelines for quality assurance in pathology in CRC screening and diagnosis: introduction of N1c category leads to stage shift from II to III for some tumours) |