| Literature DB >> 22531633 |
A Lugli1, E Karamitopoulou, I Zlobec.
Abstract
In 2011, the Tumour Node Metastasis (TNM) staging system still remains the gold standard for stratifying colorectal cancer (CRC) patients into prognostic subgroups, and is considered a solid basis for treatment management. Nevertheless, there is still a challenge with regard to therapeutic strategy; stage II patients are not typically selected for postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy, although some stage II patients have a comparable outcome to stage III patients who, themselves do receive such treatment. Consequently, there has been an inundation of 'prognostic biomarker' studies aiming to improve the prognostic stratification power of the TNM staging system. Most proposed biomarkers are not implemented because of lack of reproducibility, validation and standardisation. This problem can be partially resolved by following the REMARK guidelines. In search of novel prognostic factors for patients with CRC, one might glance at a table in the book entitled 'Prognostic Factors in Cancer' published by the International Union against Cancer (UICC) in 2006, in which TNM stage, L and V classifications are considered 'essential' prognostic factors, whereas tumour grade, perineural invasion, tumour budding and tumour-border configuration among others are proposed as 'additional' prognostic factors. Histopathology reports normally include the 'essential' features and are accompanied by tumour grade, histological subtype and information on perineural invasion, but interestingly, the tumour-border configuration (i.e., growth pattern) and especially tumour budding are rarely reported. Although scoring systems such as the 'BRE' in breast and 'Gleason' in prostate cancer are solidly based on histomorphological features and used in daily practice, no such additional scoring system to complement TNM staging is available for CRC. Regardless of differences in study design and methods for tumour-budding assessment, the prognostic power of tumour budding has been confirmed by dozens of study groups worldwide, suggesting that tumour budding may be a valuable candidate for inclusion into a future prognostic scoring system for CRC. This mini-review therefore attempts to present a short and concise overview on tumour budding, including morphological, molecular and prognostic aspects underlining its inter-disciplinary relevance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22531633 PMCID: PMC3364122 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2012.127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1H&E stain showing the difference between the two additional prognostic parameters – tumour budding and tumour-budding configuration in CRC. (A) Infiltrating tumour-border configuration and presence of many tumour buds at the invasive front. (B) Infiltrating tumour-border configuration without tumour buds; in this case, the invasive front includes only tumour glands. (C) Pushing tumour-border configuration and presence of several tumour buds and (D) pushing tumour-border configuration without tumour budding.
Figure 2Overview of the histomorphological and molecular features of the tumour centre, invasive front and tumour buds in CRC. Reproduced from Zlobec and Lugli, 2010.
Figure 3Visualisation of the proposed tumour budding scoring systems according to Hase (A, B), Nakamura (C, D), Ueno (E, F), one high-power field (G) and 10 high-power fields (H) average.