| Literature DB >> 29721106 |
Henning Reis1, Ulrich Krafft2, Christian Niedworok2, Orsolya Módos3, Thomas Herold1, Mark Behrendt4, Hikmat Al-Ahmadie5, Boris Hadaschik2, Peter Nyirady3, Tibor Szarvas2,3.
Abstract
Urachal cancer (UrC) is a rare but aggressive cancer. Due to overlapping histomorphology, discrimination of urachal from primary bladder adenocarcinomas (PBAC) and adenocarcinomas secondarily involving the bladder (particularly colorectal adenocarcinomas, CRC) can be challenging. Therefore, we aimed to give an overview of helpful (immunohistochemical) biomarkers and clinicopathological factors in addition to survival analyses and included institutional data from 12 urachal adenocarcinomas. A PubMed search yielded 319 suitable studies since 1930 in the English literature with 1984 cases of UrC including 1834 adenocarcinomas (92%) and 150 nonadenocarcinomas (8%). UrC was more common in men (63%), showed a median age at diagnosis of 50.8 years and a median tumor size of 6.0 cm. No associations were noted for overall survival and progression-free survival (PFS) and clinicopathological factors beside a favorable PFS in male patients (p = 0.047). The immunohistochemical markers found to be potentially helpful in the differential diagnostic situation are AMACR and CK34βE12 (UrC versus CRC and PBAC), CK7, β-Catenin and CD15 (UrC and PBAC versus CRC), and CEA and GATA3 (UrC and CRC versus PBAC). Serum markers like CEA, CA19-9 and CA125 might additionally be useful in the follow-up and monitoring of UrC.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29721106 PMCID: PMC5867586 DOI: 10.1155/2018/7308168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dis Markers ISSN: 0278-0240 Impact factor: 3.434
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram. The diagram illustrates the phases and selection criteria used for study selection in this work.
Figure 2Distribution of the different types of UrC (a) in urachal adenocarcinomas with available information of special type and (b) in nonadenocarcinoma UrC with information of special type. UrC: urachal cancer; NOS; not otherwise specified; UC: urothelial carcinoma; SCC: squamous cell carcinoma; NE npl.: neuroendocrine neoplasms.
Useful immunohistochemical antibodies in the differential diagnosis of urachal adenocarcinoma (UrC), colorectal adenocarcinoma (CRC), and primary bladder adenocarcinoma (PBAC). Loss of MMR proteins (MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PMS2) additionally favors colorectal over urachal adenocarcinomas. For more details on reactivity rates, number of cases, and references, please refer to Supplementary Table 2. Please note that data density is low for most antibodies limiting significance. “Highest” data quality is available for CK7, β-Catenin, and CEA.−: negative (0% positive); (−): mostly negative (1–25% positive); +/−: some positive (26–50% positive); (+): mostly positive (51–75% positive); +: positive (76–100% positive).
| Reactivity | Differential diagnosis | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biomarker (IHC) | UrC | CRC | PBAC | UrC versus CRC and PBAC | UrC and PBAC versus CRC | UrC and CRC versus PBAC |
| AMACR (p504s) | (−) | + | (+) | + | − | − |
| CK34 | (+) | (−) | +/− | + | − | − |
| CK7 | (+) | +/− | (+) | − | + | − |
|
| (−) | + | (−) | − | + | − |
| CD15 (Leu-M1) | + | +/− | (+) | − | + | − |
| CEA | + | + | (+) | − | − | + |
| GATA3 | − | − | (+) | − | − | + |
Figure 3A representative case of mucinous urachal adenocarcinoma. (a) Atypical cells floating in extracellular mucin. Focal signet ring cell morphology is noticeable (H&E staining). The case exhibited a typical profile in further immunohistochemical studies with no reactivity for CK7 (b) but positive reactivity for CK20 (c) and CDX2 (d, nuclear). As in all analyzed cases, no GATA3 reactivity was noted (e). In the β-Catenin immunohistochemistry, a strong membranous and cytoplasmic but no nuclear reactivity was noted (f; inlay magnification 600x). The immunohistochemical reactions against the MMR proteins all were positive, that is, MLH1 (g), PMS2 (h), MSH2 (i), and MSH6 (j).
|
| % | |
|---|---|---|
| Studies | 319 | 100 |
| Original study | 72 | 22.6 |
| Case report | 235 | 73.7 |
| Missing information | 12 | 3.7 |
| UrC total | 1984 | 100 |
| UrC adenocarcinoma total | 1834 | 100 |
| UrC adenocarcinoma specific type | 1144 | 62.4 |
| Mucinous | 647 | 56.6 |
| Enteric | 172 | 15.0 |
| NOS | 157 | 13.7 |
| Mixed | 96 | 8.4 |
| Signet ring | 72 | 6.3 |
| UrC adenocarcinoma type n/a | 690 | 37.6 |
| UrC nonadenocarcinoma | 150 | 100 |
| UrC nonadenocarcinoma specific type | 124 | 82.7 |
| UC | 58 | 46.8 |
| Sarcoma | 34 | 27.4 |
| SCC | 26 | 21.0 |
| Neuroendocrine npl. | 6 | 4.8 |
| UrC nonadenocarcinoma type n/a | 26 | 17.3 |
| Gender information available | 1491 | 100 |
| Male | 936 | 62.8 |
| Female | 555 | 37.2 |
| Age (mean/median) in years | 48.6/50.8 | |
| Tumor size (mean/median) in cm | 7.1/6.0 |
| Overall survival | Progression-free survival | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR | 95% CI |
| HR | 95% CI |
| |
| UrC type | ||||||
| Adenocarcinoma | 2.031 | 0.452–9.117 | 0.355 | 4.782 | 0.626–36.506 | 0.131 |
| Nonadenocarcinoma | ref. | ref. | ||||
| UrC adenocarcinoma | ||||||
| Mucinous | 0.888 | 0.192–4.095 | 0.879 | 0.736 | 0.203–2.667 | 0.641 |
| Nonmucinous | ref. | ref. | ||||
| UrC nonadenocarcinoma | ||||||
| UC | n/a∗ | n/a∗ | n/a∗ | n/a∗ | n/a∗ | n/a∗ |
| Non-UC | ref. | ref. | ||||
| Gender | ||||||
| Male | 0.629 | 0.276–1.430 | 0.268 | 0.197 | 0.039–0.981 | 0.047 |
| Female | ref. | ref. | ||||
| Age^ | ||||||
| <45 years | 1.880 | 0.769–4.598 | 0.167 | 1.534 | 0.652–3.610 | 0.327 |
| >45 years | ref. | ref. | ||||
| Tumor size^ | ||||||
| <7.0 cm | 2.644 | 0.502–13.923 | 0.251 | 2.943 | 0.592–14.622 | 0.187 |
| >7.0 cm | ref | ref. | ||||