| Literature DB >> 25888857 |
Haruki Sada1, Manabu Shimomura2, Takao Hinoi3, Hiroyuki Egi4, Koji Kawaguchi5, Takuya Yano6, Hiroaki Niitsu7, Yasufumi Saitou8, Hiroyuki Sawada9, Masashi Miguchi10, Tomohiro Adachi11, Hideki Ohdan12.
Abstract
The standard operation for colitic cancer in ulcerative colitis (UC) is restorative proctocolectomy; however, sporadic colorectal cancer (CRC) can coincidentally arise in patients with UC and the optimal procedure remains controversial. Therefore, it is crucial to preoperatively determine whether the CRC in UC is a sporadic or colitic cancer. We report a case of avoiding proctocolectomy for sporadic CRC in a patient with UC based on preoperative diagnosis involving p53 immunostaining. A 73-year-old man with CRC in UC had undergone sigmoid colectomy with lymphadenectomy because of the submucosal deep invasion pathologically after endoscopic mucosal resection. The cancer was diagnosed sporadic cancer preoperatively not only based on the endoscopic, clinical, and histological patterns but also that the colon epithelium was unlikely to develop dysplasia as the circumference and unaffected UC mucosa did not detect p53 protein overexpression. Recent reports have shown that the immunohistochemical detection of p53 protein overexpression can be useful for a differential diagnosis and as a predictor of dysplasia and colitic cancer. The analysis of p53 mutation status based on immunostaining of p53 protein expression in the unaffected UC mucosa can be useful for the decision regarding a surgical procedure for CRC in patients with UC.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25888857 PMCID: PMC4377048 DOI: 10.1186/s12957-015-0540-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Figure 1Initial endoscopic findings. Colonoscopy showed mild mucosal inflammation throughout the cecum to the left-sided colon (A,B) and moderate inflammation from the sigmoid colon to the rectum (C,D). The findings also included a well-circumscribed raised tumor, which was revealed to have a type IV to VI pit pattern, 15 mm in diameter, in the sigmoid colon (C).
Figure 2Histopathological findings for the endoscopic resection on immunohistochemistry for p53 protein. (A) The cancer lesion shows diffuse positivity on p53 immunostaining. (B) The boundary between cancer and circumference mucosa is shown. The circumference mucosa adjoining to cancer does not show any dysplasia. Only a few weak positive cells are exhibited in the non-neoplasia mucosa.