| Literature DB >> 25177546 |
Viktor H Koelzer1, Rupert Langer1, Inti Zlobec2, Alessandro Lugli1.
Abstract
The basis of personalized medicine in oncology is the prediction of an individual's risk of relapse and death from disease. The presence of tumor budding (TB) at the tumor-host interface of gastrointestinal cancers has been recognized as a hallmark of unfavorable disease biology. TB is defined as the presence of dedifferentiated cells or small clusters of up to five cells at the tumor invasive front and can be observed in aggressive carcinomas of the esophagus, stomach, pancreas, ampulla, colon, and rectum. Presence of TB reproducibly correlates with advanced tumor stage, frequent lymphovascular invasion, nodal, and distant metastasis. The UICC has officially recognized TB as additional independent prognostic factor in cancers of the colon and rectum. Recent studies have also characterized TB as a promising prognostic indicator for clinical management of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma, adenocarcinoma of the gastro-esophageal junction, and gastric adenocarcinoma. However, several important issues have to be addressed for application in daily diagnostic practice: (1) validation of prognostic scoring systems for TB in large, multi-center studies, (2) consensus on the optimal assessment method, and (3) inter-observer reproducibility. This review provides a comprehensive analysis of TB in cancers of the upper gastrointestinal tract including critical appraisal of perspectives for further study.Entities:
Keywords: epithelial–mesenchymal transition; esophageal cancer; gastric cancer; gastrointestinal cancer; prognostic factor; tumor budding; tumor microenvironment
Year: 2014 PMID: 25177546 PMCID: PMC4132482 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2014.00216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Tumor budding. (A) High-power image (250×) of tumor budding at the invasive front of colorectal cancer as visualized by pancytokeratin (brown) immunohistochemistry. (B) Tumor buds as seen in a standard hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stain (250×).
Figure 2Tumor budding leads to vascular invasion and metastasis. The formation of tumor buds is thought to be the visible correlate of epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) in the tumor microenvironment. Following tumor cell dissociation, lymphovascular invasion is frequently observed in high-grade budding tumors. TB could be a source of circulating cancer cells (CICs), leading to the establishment of metastasis at distant sites in the process of mesenchymal–epithelial transition (MET).
Methods used for assessment of tumor budding.
| Reference | Method | Classification | Staining | Region | Area |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morodomi et al., 1989 ( | Qualitative; subjective assessment of TB intensity | Present or absent | H&E | Invasive front | Entire invasive front |
| Hase et al., 1993 ( | Qualitative; subjective assessment of TB intensity | None/mild (BD-1) | H&E | Invasive front | Entire invasive front |
| Moderate/severe (BD-2) | |||||
| Ono et al., 1996 ( | Quantitative; all cancer cells with a single or solitary trabecular form with indistinct polarity (“focal dedifferentiation units”) counted along the invasive front (200×) | None (0 unit) Mild (1–20 units) Moderate (21–50 units) Severe (>50 units) | H&E | Invasive front | Entire invasive front |
| Nakamura et al., 2005 ( | Semi-quantitative assessment of the proportion of the invasive front with TB | None, mild (<1/3 with TB) Marked (>2/3 with TB) | H&E | Invasive front | Entire invasive front |
| Moderate (1/3–2/3 with TB) | |||||
| Park et al., 2005 ( | Quantitative assessment of TB; the number of buds is counted in three fields assessed under high-power (200×) in area of most intense TB along invasive front. TB intensity is defined as maximum number of buds within the three fields | Continuous score | H&E | Invasive front | Entire invasive front assessed under low power, 1 field (200×) counted |
| Nakamura et al., 2008 ( | Semi-quantitative assessment of the proportion of the invasive front with TB | None/mild (low-grade) Moderate/marked (high-grade) | H&E | Invasive front | Entire invasive front |
| Ueno et al., 2002 ( | Quantitative; invasive front scanned at low power to identify region with densest TB; buds are counted in one HPF | Low-grade (<10 buds) High-grade (≥10 buds) | H&E | Invasive front | 0.385 mm2 |
| Ueno et al., 2004 ( | Quantitative; invasive front scanned at low power to identify region with densest TB; buds are counted in one HPF | Low-grade (<5 buds) High-grade (≥5 buds) | H&E | Invasive front | 0.785 mm2 |
| Wang et al., 2009 ( | Conventional method: quantitative; invasive front scanned at low power to identify region with densest TB; buds are then counted in 5 high-power fields | Low-grade (<50% of HPFs exceed the median bud count of all fields) High-grade (≥50% of HPFs exceed the median bud count of all fields) | H&E | Invasive front | 0.94985 mm2 |
| Wang et al., 2009 ( | Rapid method: quantitative; 5 HPFs are evaluated for presence of TB | Low-grade (<50% of HPFs examined positive for TB) | H&E | Invasive front | 0.94985 mm2 |
| High-grade (≥50% of HPFs examined positive for TB) | |||||
| Lugli et al., 2009 (1HPF method) ( | Quantitative; 1 HPF counted in areas of densest TB | Low-grade (<10 buds in 1 HPF of highest density) | PanCK | Invasive front | 0.49 mm2 |
| High-grade (≥10 buds in 1 HPF of highest density) | |||||
| Ohike et al., 2010 ( | Semi-quantitative; budding foci are identified. Buds are counted in one HPF of each focus as specified by Ueno ( | Low budding (0–2 positive fields) High budding (three or more budding fields) | H&E | Invasive front | 0.785 mm2/HPF |
| Karamitopoulou et al., 2013 (10HPF method) ( | Quantitative; 10 HPF counted in areas of densest TB | Low-grade (<100 buds total in 10 HPFs of highest density) High-grade (≥100 buds total in 10 HPFs of highest density) | PanCK | Invasive front | 0.49 mm2/HPF for a total area of 4.9 mm2 |
| Landau et al., 2014 ( | Semi-quantitative; 5 HPFs are evaluated for presence of TB; A HPF is counted as positive for TB when 5 or more tumor buds are present | No budding (no budding fields) Focal budding (one to two budding fields) | H&E | Invasive front | 0.785 mm2/HPF |
| Extensive budding (three or more budding fields) |
TB, tumor budding; HPF, high-power field; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; PanCK, pancytokeratin.
Studies on tumor budding as a histomorphological prognostic factor in squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus.
| Reference | Tumor subtype | Stage | Treatment | Method for assessment of TuB | Low-grade/high-grade TB% | Correlation of high-grade TB with clinicopathological features ( | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Roh et al., 2004 ( | SCC | I–III | 56 | 56/56 Patients were treated by primary resection | Ueno et al., 2004 ( | 39.3/60.7 | T-stage, L1, Pn1, larger tumor size, circumferential resection margin involvement, advanced AJCC-stage | 3-year survival rates after esophagectomy with low-grade TB: 72.3%; high-grade TB: 30.7% ( |
| Koike et al., 2008 ( | SCC | I–IV | 136 | 82/136 Patients received pre-operative CTX- and/or RTX 52/139 Patients received adjuvant CTX- and/or RTX | Ueno et al., 2004 ( | 39.8/60.2 | T-stage, N-stage, L1, increased invasion depth, larger tumor size, intramural metastasis | 5-year survival rates after esophagectomy with low-grade TB: 35.4%; high-grade TB: 81.3% ( |
| Miyata et al., 2009 ( | SCC | II–IV | 74 | 74/74 Patients received pre-operative CTX | Ueno et al., 2004 ( | 59/41 | Not analyzed | 5-year survival rates after esophagectomy with low-grade TB: 49%; high-grade TB: 17% ( |
| Nakanishi et al., 2011 ( | SCC | I–IV | 82 | 82/82 Patients were treated by primary resection 22/82 Patients received adjuvant CTX | Ueno et al., 2004 ( | 43.9/56.1 | T-stage, N-stage, L1, V1, larger tumor size | Disease-free survival time in patients with low-grade TB: 113 months; in patients with high-grade TB: 31 months ( |
| Teramoto et al., 2013 ( | SCC | I | 79 | 73/79 Patients were treated by primary resection 6/79 Patients were treated by EMR followed by radical surgery | Modified Ueno et al., 2004 ( | 63.3/36.7 | N-stage, L1, V1, tumor differentiation, increased invasion depth | 3-year survival rates after esophagectomy with low-grade TB: 94.5%; High-grade TB: 48.8% ( |
| 11/79 Patients received adjuvant CTX- and/or RTX |
TB, tumor budding; SCC, squamous cell carcinoma; AC, adenocarcinoma; CTX, chemotherapy; RTX, radiotherapy; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; PanCK, pancytokeratin; V1, venous invasion; L1, lymphatic invasion; Pn1, perineural invasion.
Studies on tumor budding as a histomorphological prognostic factor in adenocarcinoma of the esophagus.
| Reference | Tumor subtype | Stage | Treatment | Method for assessment of TuB | Low-grade/high-grade TB% | Correlation of high-grade TB with clinicopathological features ( | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brown et al., 2010 ( | AC/SCC | I–IV | Total: 356 69 SCC 287 AC | 241/356 Patients treated by primary resection 115/356 Patients received pre-operative CTX | Ueno et al., 2004 ( | 48.3/51.7 | T-stage, N-stage, poor tumor differentiation, circumferential resection margin involvement, higher overall TNM-stage, low inflammatory response. No separate analysis of SCC and AC was performed. | Low-grade TB: OS 31 months; high-grade TB: OS 15 months ( |
| Thies et al., 2013 ( | AC | I–IV | 86 | 86/86 Patients were treated by primary resection | Karamitopoulou et al., 2013 ( | 60.5/39.5 | pT-stage, higher tumor grade, non-intestinal/diffuse histological subtype, higher rates of R1-resection | Survival analysis showed a trend to worse survival for high-grade TB ( |
| Nowak et al., 2013 ( | AC | I | 42 | 42/42 Patients were treated by primary resection | Adapted Ueno et al., 2004 ( | Not specified | N-stage | High-grade TB was a strong predictor of tumor recurrence (HR = 14.21; |
| Landau et al., 2014 ( | AC | I esophageal AC or AC of gastro esophageal junction | 210 | 210/210 Patients were treated by primary resection | Ueno et al., 2004 ( | Any TB: 44.3% focal: 16% extensive 28% no TB: 55.7% | N-stage, submucosal invasion depth, grade, angioinvasion, tumor size | 5-year OS: no TB: 79%, focal TB: 71%, extensive TB: 37% ( |
| Disease recurrence at 24 months: no TB: 5%, focal TB: 19%, extensive TB: 36% | ||||||||
| Multivariate analysis: HR for recurrence (extensive TB): 3.3 (95% CI = 1.4–7.0, |
TB, tumor budding; SCC, squamous cell carcinoma; AC, adenocarcinoma; CTX, chemotherapy; RTX, radiotherapy; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; PanCK, pancytokeratin; V1, venous invasion; L1, lymphatic invasion; Pn1, perineural invasion; OS, overall survival.
Studies on tumor budding as a histomorphological prognostic factor in gastric adenocarcinoma.
| Reference | Tumor subtype | Stage | Treatment | Method for assessment of TuB | Low-grade/high-grade TB% | Correlation of high-grade TB with clinicopathological features ( | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gabbert et al., 1992 ( | AC | I–IV | 445 | 445/445 Patients treated by primary resection | Ueno et al., 2004 ( | 48.3/51.7 | T-stage, N-stage, tumor grade, circumferential resection margin involvement | OS 31 months in patients with low-grade TB; OS 15 months in patients with high-grade TB ( |
| Tanaka et al., 2014 ( | AC | I–IV | 320 | 320/320 Patients treated by primary resection 111/320 Patients received adjuvant CTX 50/320 Patients received palliative CTX | Modified Karamitopoulou et al., 2013 ( | 40.0/60.0 | T-stage, N-stage, L1, synchronous liver metastasis, other distant metastasis, larger tumor size, depressive macroscopic morphology | High-grade TB is a poor prognostic factor in patients with differentiated histology ( |
TB, tumor budding; SCC, squamous cell carcinoma; AC, adenocarcinoma; CTX, chemotherapy; RTX, radiotherapy; H&E, hematoxylin and eosin; PanCK, pancytokeratin; V1, venous invasion; L1, lymphatic invasion; Pn1, perineural invasion; OS, overall survival.
Figure 3Tumor budding in Barrett’s carcinoma. (A) Poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma of the esophagus with signet cell component as seen in a pancytokeratin (top) and H&E (bottom) stain (250×). Tumor buds cannot be differentiated by morphology from the diffusely infiltrating tumor mass. (B) Intestinal type adenocarcinoma of the esophagus with presence of tumor buds at the invasive front as seen in a pancytokeratin (top) and H&E (bottom) stain (250×).