| Literature DB >> 28206961 |
Sun-Young Jun1, Eui-Jin Lee2, Mi-Ju Kim3, Sung Min Chun4, Young Kyung Bae5, Soon Uk Hong6, Jene Choi4, Joon Mee Kim7, Kee-Taek Jang8, Jung Yeon Kim9, Gwang Il Kim10, Soo Jin Jung11, Ghilsuk Yoon12, Seung-Mo Hong4.
Abstract
Lynch syndrome is an autosomal-dominant disorder caused by defective DNA mismatch repair (MMR) genes and is associated with increased risk of malignancies in multiple organs. Small-intestinal adenocarcinomas are common initial manifestations of Lynch syndrome. To define the incidence and characteristics of Lynch syndrome-related small-intestinal adenocarcinomas, meticulous familial and clinical histories were obtained from 195 patients with small-intestinal adenocarcinoma, and MMR protein immunohistochemistry, microsatellite instability, MLH1 methylation, and germline mutational analyses were performed. Lynch syndrome was confirmed in eight patients (4%), all of whom had synchronous/metachronous malignancies without noticeable familial histories. Small-intestinal adenocarcinomas were the first clinical manifestation in 37% (3/8) of Lynch syndrome patients, and second malignancies developed within 5 years in 63% (5/8). The patients with accompanying Lynch syndrome were younger (≤50 years; P=0.04) and more likely to have mucinous adenocarcinomas (P=0.003), and tended to survive longer (P=0.11) than those with sporadic cases. A meticulous patient history taking, MMR protein immunolabeling, and germline MMR gene mutational analysis are important for the diagnosis of Lynch syndrome-related small-intestinal adenocarcinomas. Identifying Lynch syndrome in patients with small-intestinal adenocarcinoma can be beneficial for the early detection and treatment of additional Lynch syndrome-related cancers, especially in patients who are young or have mucinous adenocarcinomas.Entities:
Keywords: DNA mismatch repair; Lynch syndrome; hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer syndrome; microsatellite instability; small intestinal adenocarcinoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28206961 PMCID: PMC5400600 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.15277
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Flow chart showing exclusion and inclusion criteria for identification of patients with LS-related SIAC
Synchronous or metachronous tumors in other organs of patients with SIAC
| Synchronous or metachronous tumors ( | |
|---|---|
| Tumors related to LS | 40 |
| CRCs | 20 |
| One synchronous or metachronous CRC | 18 |
| Two metachronous CRCs | 2 |
| GCs | 14 |
| One synchronous or metachronous GC | 13 |
| Two metachronous GCs | 1 |
| CRC and GC | 2 |
| One synchronous CRC and another metachronous GC | 1 |
| One synchronous GC and another metachronous CRC | 1 |
| Brain tumor | 1 |
| Common bile duct cancer | 1 |
| Ovarian cancer | 2 |
| Tumors unrelated to LS | 11 |
| Lung cancers | 4 |
| Uterine cervical cancers | 2 |
| Appendiceal cancer | 1 |
| Lung cancer and gastric gastrointestinal stromal tumor | 1 |
| Bladder cancer | 1 |
| Testicular tumor | 1 |
| Soft tissue chondrosarcoma | 1 |
Abbreviations: CRC, colorectal carcinoma; GC, gastric carcinoma.
Correlation between clinicopathologic factors and suspected LS in SIAC
| Clinicopathologic factors | Number of patients | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| With suspected LS | Without suspected LS | ||||
| Patient number | 40 | 155 | |||
| Relatives with LS-related tumors | Absent | 186 | 38 (95%) | 148 (95%) | 1.00 |
| Present | 9 | 2 (5%) | 7 (5%) | ||
| Age (years) | ≤50 | 54 | 13 (33%) | 41 (27%) | 0.45 |
| >50 | 141 | 27 (67%) | 114 (73%) | ||
| Sex | Male | 122 | 26 (65%) | 96 (62%) | 0.72 |
| Female | 73 | 14 (35%) | 59 (38%) | ||
| Location | Proximal (duodenum) | 106 | 17 (42%) | 89 (57%) | 0.09 |
| Distal (jejunum, ileum) | 89 | 23 (58%) | 66 (43%) | ||
| Growth pattern§ | Polypoid | 35 | 9 (24%) | 26 (18%) | 0.30 |
| Nodular | 12 | 4 (10%) | 8 (5%) | ||
| Infiltrative | 140 | 25 (66%) | 115 (77%) | ||
| Histologic type | Tubular | 177 | 36 (90%) | 141 (91%) | 0.48 |
| Mucinous | 9 | 3 (8%) | 6 (4%) | ||
| Signet ring cell | 4 | 1 (2%) | 3 (2%) | ||
| Undifferentiated | 5 | 0 | 5 (3%) | ||
| Mucinous adenocarcinoma | Absent | 186 | 37 (93%) | 149 (96%) | 0.39 |
| Present | 9 | 3 (7%) | 6 (4%) | ||
| Grade | Low | 148 | 31 (78%) | 117 (75%) | 0.79 |
| High | 47 | 9 (22%) | 38 (25%) | ||
| pT classification¶ | pT1 + pT2 | 16 | 4 (10%) | 12 (8%) | 0.58 |
| pT3 | 63 | 15 (39%) | 48 (32%) | ||
| pT4 | 112 | 20 (51%) | 92 (60%) | ||
| pN classification§ | pN0 | 86 | 19 (51%) | 67 (48%) | 0.73 |
| pN1 + pN2 | 90 | 18 (49%) | 72 (52%) | ||
| Pancreatic invasion | Absent | 126 | 31 (78%) | 95 (61%) | 0.06 |
| Present | 69 | 9 (22%) | 60 (39%) | ||
| Other loop invasion | Absent | 190 | 38 (95%) | 152 (98%) | 0.27 |
| Present | 5 | 2 (5%) | 3 (2%) | ||
| Retroperitoneal seeding | Absent | 181 | 38 (95%) | 143 (92%) | 0.74 |
| Present | 14 | 2 (5%) | 12 (8%) | ||
| Lymphovascular invasion | Absent | 94 | 24 (60%) | 70 (45%) | 0.09 |
| Present | 101 | 16 (40%) | 85 (55%) | ||
| Perineural invasion | Absent | 132 | 31 (78%) | 101 (65%) | 0.14 |
| Present | 63 | 9 (22%) | 54 (35%) | ||
§Calculated only using patients with sufficient available data.
¶Patients with pTis were excluded.
Figure 2Representative image of MSI analysis
Expression levels of five quasi-monomorphic mononucleotide repeats were evaluated in SIACs and normal colonic mucosa. For this case, MSI was observed at all mononucleotide loci. Therefore, this case was declared MSI-H.
MMR protein immunohistochemistry and germline MMR gene mutations in LS-related SIAC
| MMR protein expression loss ( | Germline MMR gene mutation* | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MLH1 and PMS2 | 1 (12%) | ||||
| MSH2 and MSH6 | 5 (63%) | ||||
| c.2765G>A | |||||
| c.942+8A>Tc.942+25_942+29delAAAAA | |||||
| PMS2, MSH2, and MSH6 | 2 (25%) | c.23+72C>T | |||
| c.23+72C>T | |||||
*Known germline mutations registered in the LOVD and InSiGHT database and ClinVar archive are shown in bold.
Characteristics of patients with LS-related SIAC
| Characteristics ( | ||
|---|---|---|
| Relatives with LS-related tumors | 0 | |
| Clinicopathologic factors | ||
| Age (years) | ≤50 | 5 (63%) |
| >50 | 3 (37%) | |
| Sex | Male | 6 (75%) |
| Female | 2 (25%) | |
| Location | Proximal (duodenum) | 4 (50%) |
| Distal (jejunum, ileum) | 4 (50%) | |
| Growth pattern | Polypoid | 1 (12%) |
| Infiltrative | 7 (88%) | |
| Histologic type | Tubular | 5 (63%) |
| Mucinous | 3 (37%) | |
| Grade | Low | 8 (100%) |
| pT classification | pT3 | 4 (50%) |
| pT4 | 4 (50%) | |
| pN classification | pN0 | 3 (37%) |
| pN1 + pN2 | 5 (63%) | |
| Pancreas invasion | 3 (37%) | |
| Other loop invasion | 0 | |
| Retroperitoneal seeding | 1 (12%) | |
| Lymphovascular invasion | 3 (37%) | |
| Perineural invasion | 2 (25%) | |
| Chronological order of cancer detection | ||
| SIACs as the first malignancy | 3 (37%) | |
| Synchronous SIAC and GC | 1 | |
| First SIAC and second CRC | 1 | |
| First SIAC and second brain tumor | 1 | |
| SIACs as the second malignancy | 5 (63%) | |
| First CRC and second SIAC | 4 | |
| First GC, second SIAC, and third GC | 1 | |
Abbreviations: GC, gastric carcinoma; CRC, colorectal carcinoma.
Figure 3The various histologic features of SIACs and matched metachronous tumors
In case number 1, the SIAC A. was mucinous, while the metachronous colorectal cancer B. was tubular without a mucin component. In case number 2, the SIAC C. was tubular, but the metachronous colorectal tumor D. was mucinous. In case number 3, the SIAC E. was moderately differentiated and tubular, while the metachronous early gastric cancer F. was a well-differentiated tubular adenocarcinoma. In case number 4, the SIAC G. was moderately differentiated and tubular, and the metachronous brain tumor H. was an anaplastic oligodendroglioma. (All images, 200× magnification.)
Correlations between clinicopathologic factors and LS in patients with SIAC
| Clinicopathologic factors | Number of patients | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LS-related | Sporadic | ||||
| Patient number | 8 | 187 | |||
| Relatives with LS-related tumors | Absent | 186 | 8 (100%) | 178 (95%) | 1.00 |
| Present | 9 | 0 | 9 (5%) | ||
| Any other associated malignancy | Absent | 142 | 0 | 142 (76%) | |
| Present | 53 | 8 (100%) | 45 (24%) | ||
| Age (years) | ≤50 | 54 | 5 (63%) | 49 (26%) | |
| >50 | 141 | 3 (37%) | 138 (74%) | ||
| Sex | Male | 122 | 6 (75%) | 116 (62%) | 0.71 |
| Female | 73 | 2 (25%) | 71 (38%) | ||
| Location | Proximal (duodenum) | 106 | 4 (50%) | 102 (55%) | 1.00 |
| Distal (jejunum, ileum) | 89 | 4 (50%) | 85 (45%) | ||
| Growth pattern§ | Polypoid | 35 | 1 (12%) | 34 (19%) | 1.00 |
| Nodular | 12 | 0 | 12 (7%) | ||
| Infiltrative | 140 | 7 (88%) | 133 (74%) | ||
| Histologic type | Tubular | 177 | 5 (63%) | 172 (92%) | |
| Mucinous | 9 | 3 (37%) | 6 (3%) | ||
| Signet ring cell | 4 | 0 | 4 (2%) | ||
| Undifferentiated | 5 | 0 | 5 (3%) | ||
| Mucinous adenocarcinoma | Absent | 186 | 5 (63%) | 181 (97%) | |
| Present | 9 | 3 (37%) | 6 (3%) | ||
| Grade | Low | 148 | 8 (100%) | 140 (75%) | 0.20 |
| High | 47 | 0 | 47 (25%) | ||
| pT classification¶ | pT1 + pT2 | 16 | 0 | 16 (9%) | 0.52 |
| pT3 | 63 | 4 (50%) | 59 (32%) | ||
| pT4 | 112 | 4 (50%) | 108 (59%) | ||
| pN classification§ | pN0 | 86 | 3 (37%) | 83 (49%) | 0.72 |
| pN1 + pN2 | 90 | 5 (63%) | 85 (51%) | ||
| Pancreatic invasion | Absent | 126 | 5 (63%) | 121 (65%) | 1.00 |
| Present | 69 | 3 (37%) | 66 (35%) | ||
| Other loop invasion | Absent | 190 | 8 (100%) | 182 (97%) | 1.00 |
| Present | 5 | 0 | 5 (3%) | ||
| Retroperitoneal seeding | Absent | 181 | 7 (88%) | 174 (93%) | 0.46 |
| Present | 14 | 1 (12%) | 13 (7%) | ||
| Lymphovascular invasion | Absent | 94 | 5 (63%) | 89 (48%) | 0.49 |
| Present | 101 | 3 (37%) | 98 (52%) | ||
| Perineural invasion | Absent | 132 | 6 (75%) | 126 (67%) | 1.00 |
| Present | 63 | 2 (25%) | 61 (33%) | ||
§Calculated only using patients with sufficient available data.
¶Patients with pTis were excluded.
*Significant P-values are shown in bold.
Figure 4Survival of patients with LS-related and sporadic SIACs
The median overall survival of patients with LS-related SIACs (126.5 months) tended to be better than that of patients with sporadic SIACs (29.1 months, P = 0.11, log-rank test).
Modified clinical criteria for the diagnosis of LS in patients with SIAC [1]
| LS is suspected when patients meet one of the following criteria: |
|---|
| Amsterdam criteria I: There is no applicable guideline for patients with SIAC. |
| Amsterdam criteria II: There should be at least three relatives with a LS-associated cancer, and all of the following criteria should be present. |
| 1. One relative is a first-degree relative of the other two relatives. |
| 2. At least two successive generations are affected. |
| 3. At least one person was diagnosed before the age of 50 years. |
| 4. Familial adenomatous polyposis should be excluded in CRC case(s), if any. |
| 5. Tumors should be verified by pathological examination. |
| Revised Bethesda criteria |
| 1. Synchronous SIAC, metachronous SIAC, or other LS-related tumors are present, regardless of age. |
| 2. The patient with SIAC has a first-degree relative who was diagnosed with CRC, with one of the cancers diagnosed before the age of 50 years. |
| 3. The patient with SIAC has two or more first-degree or second-degree relatives with LS-related tumors, regardless of the age of diagnosis. One relative should have CRC. |
Abbreviations: CRC, colorectal carcinoma.
Antibodies used in this study
| Antibody | Clone | Dilution | Supplier |
|---|---|---|---|
| MLH1 | mouse monoclonal (M1) | Prediluted | Roche |
| MSH2 | mouse monoclonal (G219-1129) | 1:1000 | Cell Marque |
| MSH6 | mouse monoclonal (44) | 1:200 | Cell Marque |
| PMS2 | rabbit monoclonal (EP51) | 1:100 | Dako |
Figure 5Representative images of MMR protein expression in LS-related SIACs
Loss of A. MLH1, B. PMS2, C. MSH2, and D. MSH6 protein expression was observed in LS-related SIACs. Lymphocytes are used as internal positive controls. (All images, 200× magnification.)