| Literature DB >> 31480554 |
Ayaka Yanagi1, Jun Nishikawa2, Kanami Shimokuri1, Takuya Shuto1, Tatsuya Takagi1, Fumiya Takagi1, Yuki Kobayashi1, Misa Yamamoto1, Osamu Miura3, Hideo Yanai4, Yutaka Suehiro5, Takahiro Yamasaki5, Hironori Yoshiyama6, Isao Sakaida7.
Abstract
: Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a ubiquitous human herpes virus, but related with several types of malignancies. Among EBV-related malignancies, EBV-associated gastric carcinoma (EBVaGC) has the largest patient's number. We screened for EBV infection in 1067 GC lesions of 1132 patients who underwent surgical resection from 2007 to 2017 in Japan and examined clinicopathological features of EBVaGC. EBV infection was detected by in situ hybridization with EBV-encoded small RNA 1(EBER-1 ISH). EBV was infected in 80 GC lesions (7.1%). Mean age was significantly lower in patients with EBVaGC than with EBV-negative GC. EBVaGC was more frequent in men than in women. EBVaGC was found twice as frequent in the upper or middle stomach as in the lower stomach. Early EBVaGC was more frequent, and submucosally invaded cases were dominant. The presence of lymphatic vessel invasion was less in EBVaGC, but frequency of lymph node metastasis was similar. Carcinoma with lymphoid stroma (CLS) was found in 3.8% (43/1132) of all lesions with 60.5% of EBV positivity. The synchronous or metachronous multiple GC was frequent in EBVaGC. We clarified clinicopathologic characteristics of EBVaGC over the past decade in Japan. EBV infection should be examined in gastric cancer cases showing these characteristics.Entities:
Keywords: Epstein–Barr virus (EBV); carcinoma with lymphoid stroma; gastric carcinoma; immune checkpoint inhibitor; lymph node metastasis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31480554 PMCID: PMC6780774 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms7090305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Figure 1Histologic characteristics of Epstein-Barr virus-associated gastric carcinoma (EBVaGC). (a) Histology of carcinoma with lymphoid stroma (CLS). Undifferentiated adenocarcinomas (black arrows) are surrounded by infiltrating lymphocytes (white arrows). (H&E staining); (b) EBV-encoded small ribonucleic acid 1 in situ hybridization (EBER-1 ISH). Signals of EBER-1 are observed in nuclei of the carcinoma cells indicated by black arrows in (a). Infiltrating lymphocytes in the stroma indicated by white arrows in (a) are EBER-1 negative. Magnification (a) and (b)(×100).
Figure 2Epstein–Barr virus-associated gastric carcinoma (EBVaGC). (a) Moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma is composed of irregular tubules and moderate lymphocytic infiltration. Black arrows indicate non-cancerous epithelium; (b) Dark-blue signals of EBV encoded small RNA 1 (EBER-1) are observed in cancerous area. Epithelial cells in the non-cancerous mucosa indicated by black arrows in (a) are EBER-1 negative. Magnification (a) and (b) (×40).
Clinicopathologic features of Epstein–Barr virus (EBV)-associated gastric cancer.
| Feature | Total | EBV Positive | EBV Negative | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | ||||
| Male | 735 (68.8%) | 61 (88.4%) | 674 (67.5%) | 0.022 |
| Female | 332 (31.2%) | 8 (11.6%) | 324 (32.5%) | |
| Age (yrs, mean) | 65.6 | 68.9 | <0.001 | |
| Location | ||||
| U | 228 (20.1%) | 30 (37.5%) | 198 (18.8%) | <0.001 |
| M | 520 (45.9%) | 40 (50.0%) | 480 (45.6%) | |
| L | 356 (31.4%) | 6 (7.5%) | 350 (33.3%) | |
| Remnant stomach | 28 (2.5%) | 4 (5.0%) | 24 (2.3%) | |
| Stage | ||||
| Early | 603 (58.6%) | 52 (65.0%) | 551 (52.4%) | 0.029 |
| Advanced | 529 (41.4%) | 28 (35.0%) | 501 (47.5%) | |
| Depth of invasion | ||||
| m | 318 (28.1%) | 19 (23.7%) | 299 (28.4%) | <0.001 |
| sm | 285 (25.2%) | 33 (41.3%) | 252 (24.0%) | |
| mp | 126 (11.1%) | 8 (10.0%) | 118 (11.2%) | |
| ss | 203 (17.9%) | 10 (12.5%) | 193 (18.3%) | |
| sei | 200 (17.7%) | 10 (12.5%) | 190 (18.1%) | |
| Macroscopic type | ||||
| Protruded | 192 (17.0%) | 11 (13.8%) | 181 (17.2%) | 0.428 |
| Depressed | 940 (83.0%) | 69 (86.2%) | 871 (82.8%) | |
| Pathologic type | ||||
| Differentiated | 610 (53.9%) | 37 (46.3%) | 573 (54.5%) | 0.155 |
| Undifferentiated | 522 (46.1%) | 43 (53.7%) | 479 (45.5%) | |
| Lymphatic invasion | ||||
| Presence | 536 (47.3%) | 25 (31.3%) | 511 (48.6%) | 0.003 |
| Absence | 596 (52.7%) | 55 (68.7%) | 541 (51.4%) | |
| Venous invasion | ||||
| Presence | 533 (47.1%) | 25 (31.3%) | 408 (38.8%) | 0.182 |
| Absence | 599 (52.9%) | 55 (68.7%) | 644 (61.2%) | |
| Lymph node metastasis | ||||
| Presence | 445 (41.6%) | 25 (37.3%) | 420 (42.1%) | 0.169 |
| Absence | 622 (58.4%) | 44 (63.7%) | 578 (57.9%) | |
| CLS | ||||
| Presence | 43 (3.8%) | 26 (32.5%) | 17 (1.6%) | <0.001 |
| Absence | 1089 (96.2%) | 54 (67.5%) | 1035 (98.4%) | |
| Multiple cancers | ||||
| Presence | 60 (5.6%) | 10 (14.5%) | 50 (5.0%) | <0.001 |
| Absence | 1007 (94.4%) | 59 (85.5%) | 948 (95.0%) | |
EBV: Epstein-Barr virus; CLS: carcinoma with lymphoid stroma; m: mucosa; sm: submucosa; mp: muscularis propria; ss: subserosa; sei: serosal exposed cancer infiltrating to the adjacent organ.
Figure 3Relationship between Epstein–Barr virus-associated gastric carcinoma (EBVaGC) and carcinoma with lymphoid stroma (CLS).