| Literature DB >> 24600585 |
Viktor H Koelzer1, Alessandro Lugli1.
Abstract
Histomorphological features of colorectal cancers (CRC) represent valuable prognostic indicators for clinical decision making. The invasive margin is a central feature for prognostication shaped by the complex processes governing tumor-host interaction. Assessment of the tumor border can be performed on standard paraffin sections and shows promise for integration into the diagnostic routine of gastrointestinal pathology. In aggressive CRC, an extensive dissection of host tissue is seen with loss of a clear tumor-host interface. This pattern, termed "infiltrative tumor border configuration" has been consistently associated with poor survival outcome and early disease recurrence of CRC-patients. In addition, infiltrative tumor growth is frequently associated with presence of adverse clinicopathological features and molecular alterations related to aggressive tumor behavior including BRAFV600 mutation. In contrast, a well-demarcated "pushing" tumor border is seen frequently in CRC-cases with low risk for nodal and distant metastasis. A pushing border is a feature frequently associated with mismatch-repair deficiency and can be used to identify patients for molecular testing. Consequently, assessment of the tumor border configuration as an additional prognostic factor is recommended by the AJCC/UICC to aid the TNM-classification. To promote the assessment of the tumor border configuration in standard practice, consensus criteria on the defining features and method of assessment need to be developed further and tested for inter-observer reproducibility. The development of a standardized quantitative scoring system may lay the basis for verification of the prognostic associations of the tumor growth pattern in multivariate analyses and clinical trials. This article provides a comprehensive review of the diagnostic features, clinicopathological associations, and molecular alterations associated with the tumor border configuration in early stage and advanced CRC.Entities:
Keywords: colorectal cancer; infiltrative border; invasive margin; prognostic factor; pushing border; tumor border configuration; tumor growth pattern; tumor–host interaction
Year: 2014 PMID: 24600585 PMCID: PMC3927120 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1(A) Low power image (5×) of a H&E slide and pan-cytokeratin (brown)/CD8 (red) double stain illustrating a transmurally invasive primary CRC with an infiltrative tumor border configuration. Delineation of tumor and host tissue is difficult in the H&E stain. Residual host tissue is present between infiltrating cords and sharp wedges of long-stretched tumor glands. (B) High power detail (20×) of (A). Note the diffuse dissection of irregularly shaped tumor glands through the mesenteric adipose tissue. CD8+ lymphocytes at the tumor invasive front are infrequent (arrows). Tumor buds invading the stroma ahead of the invasive front can be identified as a superimposed feature (arrow heads).
Figure 2(A) Low power image (5×) of a H&E slide and pan-cytokeratin (brown)/CD8 (red) double stain demonstrating a primary CRC with a pushing tumor border configuration of growth. The tumor border is round and well-recognizable at low magnification. Tumor and host tissue can be easily differentiated. Host tissue is displaced by expansile tumor growth. (B) High power detail (20×) of (A). CD8+ lymphocytes are commonly observed (arrows). Tumor budding can be recognized as a superimposed feature but is generally infrequent (arrow heads).
Figure 3High power image (40×) of a pan-cytokeratin (brown)/CD8 (red) double stain illustrating dense tumor budding at the tumor invasive front. Tumor buds (arrow heads) are defined as single cells or small clusters of up to five cells ahead of the tumor invasive front. High-grade tumor budding is a feature of aggressive biological behavior in colorectal cancer. Even though tumor budding is more frequently observed in cases with an infiltrative tumor border configuration, this is an independent feature observed at high power and must not be used to define the quality of the tumor border.
Tumor border configuration as a histopathologic risk factor for lymph node metastasis in early stage colorectal cancer.
| Reference | Infiltrative tumor border configuration (%) | Clinicopathological features analyzed in correlation with pN-stage | Clinicopathological features significantly associated with pN-stage ( | Clinicopathological features analyzed with tumor border configuration | Clinicopathological features predicted by infiltrative tumor border configuration ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Egashira ( | 140 | Expansile (17.8) | SMd, SMw, differentiation of invasive component, structural atypia of invasive component, border, LInf, L, V, TuB | L1, V1, depth of invasion, cribriform-type structural atypia, low immune infiltration | pN-stage | Not significant ( |
| Predominant expansile (14.8) | ||||||
| Mixed type (42.9) | ||||||
| Predominant infiltrating (21.4) | ||||||
| Infiltrating (3.5) | ||||||
| Wang ( | 159 | Infiltrating (38.9) Expansile (61.1) | Age, location, CEA-level, Borrmann type, pN-stage, L, V, Pn, G, border, mucinous component, no. of lymph nodes sampled, SMd, LInf, MSI, TuB | G, L1, LInf, TuB | pN-stage survival | Not significantpN-stage ( |
| Kajiwara ( | 244 | Infiltrating (27.1) Expansile (72.9) | Age, gender, location, size, TuConf, annularity, G, poorly differentiated component, myxoid cancer stroma, infiltration level in muscularis propria, border, L, V, TuB | Presence of poorly differentiated component, L1, myxoid cancer stroma (multivariate), presence of poorly differentiated component, L1, myxoid cancer stroma, TuB, border (univariate) | pN-stage | pN-stage ( |
| Akishima-Fukasawa ( | 111 | Infiltrating (46.9) Expansile (53.1) | TuConf, border, disruption of muscularis mucosa, SMd, SMw, G, neutrophil infiltration in cancer cells, fibrotic cancer-type stroma, LInf, Crohn’s-like reaction, microscopic abscess formation, L, V, TuB | Border, disruption of muscularis mucosa, SMd, G, neutrophil infiltration in cancer cells, fibrotic cancer-type stroma, Crohn’s-like reaction, microscopic abscess formation, L1, TuB | pN-stage | pN-stage ( |
| Keum ( | 434 | Infiltrating (10.6) Expansile (89.4) | Age, gender, location, size, TuConf, annularity, G, poorly differentiated component, myxoid cancer stroma, infiltration level in muscularis propria, border, L, V, TuB | Infiltrative tumor border, TuB, T2 stage and rectal primary tumor associated with distant tumor recurrence | pN-stage | pN-stage ( |
V1, venous invasion; L1, lymphatic invasion; LVI, lymphovascular invasion; G, tumor grade; border, tumor border configuration; TuB, tumor budding, LInf, lymphoid cell infiltrates; R, resection margin status; SMd, depth of submucosal invasion; SMw, width of submucosal invasion; TuConf, macroscopic tumor configuration.
Tumor border configuration as a histopathologic prognostic factor in advanced colon and rectal cancer.
| Reference | Stage | Infiltrative tumor border configuration (%) | Clinicopathological features predicted by infiltrative tumor border configuration ( | End point | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jass ( | I–IV | 447 | Infiltrating (28.0) Expansile (72.0) | N.A. | Disease specific 5- and 10-year survival rates | Patients with infiltrative growth pattern had a 26% 5-year and a 21% 10-year survival rate, whereas patients with expansile border configuration had a 73% 5-year and a 68% 10-year survival rate ( |
| Jass ( | I–IV | 379 | Not specified | N.A. | Disease specific survival | Infiltrative growth pattern is a significant predictor of shorter disease-specific survival |
| Halvorsen ( | I–IV | 527 | Infiltrating (25.5) Expansile (74.5) | Poor differentiation, | Disease specific 5-year survival rates | Infiltrative growth pattern is an independent predictor of shorter disease-specific survival (HR = 1.64; 95% CI 1.21–2.23) |
| Low grade peritumoral inflammatory infiltrate, | ||||||
| Low grade peritumoral eosinophil infiltration, | ||||||
| Infrequent peritumoral abscess formation, Desmoplasia | ||||||
| Shepherd ( | I–IV | 251 | Infiltrating (16) Expansile (84) | N.A. | Disease specific 5-year survival rates | Infiltrative growth pattern is an independent prognostic variable in patients with extramural spread ( |
| Kubota ( | I–IV | 100 | Infiltrating (17) Expansile (83) | N.A. | Cancer-specific and overall survival (mean follow-up 48 months) | Infiltrative growth pattern is an independent predictor of shorter cancer-specific survival ( |
| Cianchi ( | I–IV | 235 | Infiltrating (67.6) Expansile (32.4) | N.A. | Overall 5-year survival rate | Patients with infiltrative growth pattern had a 50.4% 5-year survival rate, whereas patients with expansile border configuration had a 89% 5-year survival rate ( |
| Ueno ( | I–IV | 638 | Infiltrating (17.7) Expansile (73.8) | TuB | Disease specific 5- and 10-year survival rates | 5-year survival rates with low grade TuB and infiltrating tumor margin: 49.3%; high-grade TuB: 28.2% ( |
| Cianchi ( | IIA | 238 | Infiltrating (64.4) Expansile (36.6) | N.A. | Disease specific 8-year survival rate | Patients with infiltrative growth pattern had a 72.8% 8-year survival rate, whereas patients with expansile border configuration had a 86.2% 8-year survival rate ( |
| Zlobec ( | I–IV | 1420 (269 with information on local recurrence) | Infiltrating (49.6) Expansile (50.4) | N.A. | Local recurrence | Infiltrative growth pattern is an independent predictor of local recurrence ( |
| Ueno ( | II–III | 994 | Infiltrating (H- or S-spread; 30.48) Expansile (absence of adverse morphology) (69.52) | Vascular invasion Tumor budding Fibrotic stroma | Disease specific 5-year survival rate | Infiltrative growth pattern (H- or S-spread) is an independent predictor of shorter cancer-specific survival ( |
| Zlobec ( | I–IV | 1420 | Infiltrating (49.6) Expansile (50.4) | N.A. | Disease specific 5-year survival rate | Infiltrative growth pattern is an independent predictor of shorter cancer-specific survival (HR = 4.75; 95% CI 2.53–8.94). Stage II patients with an infiltrative growth pattern have a decreased disease specific 5-year survival rate (62.7%; 95% CI 48.0–76.2), as compared to patients with an expansile border (82.1%; 95% CI 71.8–90.3) |
| Zlobec ( | I–IV | 427 | Infiltrating (63.9) Expansile (36.1) | Vascular invasion | Disease specific 5-year survival rate | Infiltrative growth pattern is an independent predictor of shorter cancer-specific survival ( |
| Garcia-Solano ( | I–IV | 162 [81 serrated adenocarcinomas (SAC) and 81 conventional carcinomas (CC)] | SAC: expanding (58.0); infiltrating (42.0) CC: expanding (70.3); infiltrating (29.7) | TuB (SAC, CC) Cytoplasmic pseudofragments (SAC, CC) Regional lymph node metastasis (SAC, CC) | Disease specific 5-year survival rate | SACs with infiltrative growth pattern had a less favorable 5-year survival than expanding SACs ( |
| Huh ( | I–III | 546 | Infiltrating (88.1) Expansile (11. 9) | N.A. | 5-year disease free survival rate | Decreased 5-year disease free survival rate with infiltrative growth pattern ( |
| Morikawa ( | I–IV | 1139 | Infiltrating (14) Expansile (33) Intermediate (54) | N.A. | Cancer-specific and overall survival (median follow-up 137 months) | Infiltrative growth pattern is an independent predictor of shorter cancer-specific survival ( |
Contrasting features of primary colorectal cancers depending on the tumor border configuration.
| Characteristics | Infiltrative | Pushing |
|---|---|---|
| Examination of the histopathologic slide with the naked eye | No clear definition of the invasive margin is possible ( | Clearly recognizable invasive margin Easy delineation of host and malignant tissue |
| Low power magnification | Dissection of tumor tissue through anatomic structures of the bowel wall with little or absent desmoplastic stromal response ( | “Circumscribed” configuration of the infiltrative margin with desmoplastic stromal reaction |
| Irregular clusters, cords, or sharp wedges of long-stretched tumor glands ( | Absence of widely dissecting tumor glands | |
| Residual host tissue is present between infiltrating glands “Streaming dissection” ( | Host tissue is displaced “Expansile tumor growth” | |
| Additional features | Presence of perineural invasion ( | Absence of perineural infiltration |
| High-grade tumor budding is frequently observed ( | Low grade tumor budding is frequently observed | |
| Peritumoral infiltration less pronounced ( | Often intense peritumoral inflammation | |
| Molecular pathology features | More frequently observed in cases with activating BRAF-mutations ( | More frequently observed in cases with microsatellite instability ( |
| Impact on clinical outcome in transmurally invasive CRC | Unfavorable | Favorable |