| Literature DB >> 26276366 |
Toshirou Nishida1, Jean-Yves Blay2, Seiichi Hirota3, Yuko Kitagawa4, Yoon-Koo Kang5.
Abstract
Although gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are a rare type of cancer, they are the commonest sarcoma in the gastrointestinal tract. Molecularly targeted therapy, such as imatinib therapy, has revolutionized the treatment of advanced GIST and facilitates scientific research on GIST. Nevertheless, surgery remains a mainstay of treatment to obtain a permanent cure for GIST even in the era of targeted therapy. Many GIST guidelines have been published to guide the diagnosis and treatment of the disease. We review current versions of GIST guidelines published by the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, by the European Society for Medical Oncology, and in Japan. All clinical practice guidelines for GIST include recommendations based on evidence as well as on expert consensus. Most of the content is very similar, as represented by the following examples: GIST is a heterogeneous disease that may have mutations in KIT, PDGFRA, HRAS, NRAS, BRAF, NF1, or the succinate dehydrogenase complex, and these subsets of tumors have several distinctive features. Although there are some minor differences among the guidelines--for example, in the dose of imatinib recommended for exon 9-mutated GIST or the efficacy of antigen retrieval via immunohistochemistry--their common objectives regarding diagnosis and treatment are not only to improve the diagnosis of GIST and the prognosis of patients but also to control medical costs. This review describes the current standard diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up of GISTs based on the recommendations of several guidelines and expert consensus.Entities:
Keywords: Consensus based; Evidence-based; Gastrointestinal stromal tumor; Guidelines
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26276366 PMCID: PMC4688306 DOI: 10.1007/s10120-015-0526-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gastric Cancer ISSN: 1436-3291 Impact factor: 7.370
Fig. 1Pathological diagnosis of gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) by immunohistochemistry and genotyping. The algorithm for the pathological diagnosis of GIST is shown. The number sign means solitary fibrous tumors should be ruled out. DOG1 discovered on GIST-1, HE hematoxylin–eosin staining
Mutations and clinicopathological features
| Genes | Exon | Frequent mutations | Frequency | Characteristics and site | Imatinib sensitivity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| All exons | 80 % | All sites | ||
| 8 | Rare | Small bowel | Yes, intermediate | ||
| 9 | Insertion of AY 502–503 | 5–10 % | Small bowel, colon, spindle, aggressive | ||
| 11 | Deletions, missense mutations, insertions | 60–70 % | All sites | Yes | |
| Deletion of codon 557 or 558 | Aggressive, poor prognosis | ||||
| Internal tandem duplication | Benign features, clinically indolent, female, stomach | ||||
| 13 | K642E | 1 % | All sites | Yes | |
| 17 | D820Y, N822K, Y823D | 1 % | All sites | No for D816V | |
|
| All exons | 10 % | Epithelioid, clinically indolent | ||
| 12 | Missense mutations | 1–2 % | All sites | Yes | |
| 14 | N659K | <1 % | Stomach, epithelioid | Yes | |
| 18 | D842V | 10–5 % | Stomach, mesentery, omentum, epithelioid | No for D842V | |
| Wild-type | 10–15 % | All sites | Probably no | ||
|
| V600E | Rare | |||
|
| ~2 % | Carney–Stratakis syndromea; stomach, multiple, immunohistochemically SDHB negative | |||
| Juvenile GIST; stomach, clinically indolent, multiple, immunohistochemically SDHB negative | |||||
| Loss of SDH expression | Carney triadb; stomach, clinically indolent, juvenile onset, immunohistochemically SDHB negative | ||||
|
| <1 % | ||||
|
| 1–2 % | Small bowel, clinically indolent, multiple, spindle | |||
SDH succinate dehydrogenase, SDHB succinate dehydrogenase iron–sulfur subunit (subunit B)
aCarney–Stratakis syndrome: familial syndrome of multiple GIST and paragangliomas with autosomal dominant inheritance and germline mutation in the SDH complex
bCarney triad: coexistence of gastric gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST), pulmonary chondroma, and extra-adrenal paraganglioma in young women, postulated to be defect in expression of the SDH complex
Fig. 2Diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for histologically undiagnosed gastric submucosal tumor (SMT) and histologically diagnosed gastric gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST). High-risk features include ulceration, irregular borders, internal heterogeneity, enlargement of regional lymph nodes, and an increase in size during follow-up. CT computed tomography, EUS endoscopic ultrasonography, EUS-FNA endoscopic-ultrasonography-guided fine-needle aspiration biopsy
Fig. 3Treatment algorithm for unresectable, metastatic, or recurrent gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST). Interventions include surgical resection, radiofrequency ablation, and transcatheter arterial embolization for patients with limited progression. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) include imatinib, sunitinib, and regorafenib, BSC best supportive care, CR complete response, PD progressive disease, PR partial response, SD stable disease