| Literature DB >> 33179620 |
Irene Gullo1, Federica Grillo2,3, Luca Mastracci2,3, Alessandro Vanoli4, Fatima Carneiro1, Luca Saragoni5, Francesco Limarzi6, Jacopo Ferro2, Paola Parente7, Matteo Fassan8.
Abstract
Gastric cancer accounts for about 6% of cancers worldwide, being the fifth most frequently diagnosed malignancy and the third leading cause of cancer related death. Gastric carcinogenesis is a multistep and multifactorial process and is the result of the complex interplay between genetic susceptibility and environmental factors. The identification of predisposing conditions and of precancerous lesions is the basis for screening programs and early stage treatment. Furthermore, although most gastric cancers are sporadic, familial clustering is observed in up to 10% of patients. Among them, hereditary cases, related to known cancer susceptibility syndromes and/or genetic causes are thought to account for 1-3% of all gastric cancers. The pathology report of gastric resections specimens therefore requires a standardized approach as well as in depth knowledge of prognostic and treatment associated factors.Entities:
Keywords: gastric adenocarcinoma; gastric cancer; gastric dysplasia; hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (HDGC); hereditary gastric cancer syndromes
Year: 2020 PMID: 33179620 PMCID: PMC7931572 DOI: 10.32074/1591-951X-166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathologica ISSN: 0031-2983
Figure 1.Two examples of intramucosal gastric carcinoma. In contrast to high grade dysplasia, intramucosal carcinoma shows marked glandular crowding and cribriform pattern (upper image, HE, magnification 10x). The bottom image shows a very well differentiated intramucosal carcinoma with crawling pattern (HE, magnification 10x).
Figure 2.Gastric adenomas: (a) foveolar type adenoma with low grade dysplasia (HE, left image, magnification 40x, right image, magnification 10x) showing diffuse immunoreactivity for MUC5AC (inset); (b) intestinal type adenoma associated to mucinous carcinoma invading the submucosa (arrow) (HE, left image, magnification 4x); the image on the right represents an area of intestinal-type low grade dysplasia with tubular/villous morphology (HE, magnification 10x); (c) pyloric gland adenoma (HE, left image, magnification 4x, right image, magnification 20x).
Figure 3.Hyperplastic polyp with dysplasia (HE, upper image 4x) and intramucosal carcinoma (HE, middle image, magnification 40x, bottom image, magnification 10x).
Figure 4.Fundic gland polyp with focus of low grade, foveolar-type dysplasia (upper image, HE, magnification 4x; (upper image, HE, magnification 20x). The patient had attenuated variant of familial adenomatous polyposis.
Checklist for gastric cancer reporting (based on WHO Classification of Digestive System Tumors, 5th Edition and AJCC Cancer Staging Manual, 8th Edition).
| Endoscopic resection | |
| Tumor not identified macroscopically | |
| Tumor location (gastric region): cardia, fundus, body, transitional zone, antrum, pylorus | |
| Tumor location (gastric curvatures and walls): lesser curvature, greater curvature, anterior wall, posterior wall | |
| Tumor size: greatest dimension (cm) or three dimensions (cm) | |
| Tumor macroscopic appearance
Borrmann type I: polypoid/fungating Borrmann type II: ulcerated mass Borrmann type III: infiltrative neoplasm with ulceration Borrmann type IV: infiltrative neoplasm without ulceration | |
Involved by invasive carcinoma Involved by dysplasia (low-grade/high-grade) Uninvolved by invasive carcinoma or dysplasia Involved by invasive carcinoma Involved by dysplasia (low-grade/high-grade) Uninvolved by invasive carcinoma or dysplasia | |
Involved by invasive carcinoma Involved by dysplasia (low-grade/high-grade) Uninvolved by invasive carcinoma or dysplasia Involved by invasive carcinoma Involved by dysplasia (low-grade/high-grade) Uninvolved by invasive carcinoma or dysplasia Involved by invasive carcinoma (greater and/or lesser omental margin) Uninvolved by invasive carcinoma | |
Diffuse type Intestinal type Mixed type Indeterminate Tubular adenocarcinoma Papillary adenocarcinoma Tubulo-papillary adenocarcinoma Poorly cohesive carcinoma: signet ring cell type/not otherwise specified Mucinous adenocarcinoma Mixed adenocarcinoma Gastric squamous carcinoma Gastric adenosquamous carcinoma Gastric undifferentiated carcinoma Gastric cancer with lymphoid stroma Hepatoid carcinoma Alpha-fetoprotein producing gastric cancer (adenocarcinoma with enteroblastic differentiation, yolk-sac tumor like carcinoma) Micropapillary adenocarcinoma Gastric adenocarcinoma of the fundic gland type Mucoepidermoid carcinoma Paneth cell carcinoma Parietal cell carcinoma | |
| Only applicable to tubular and papillary adenocarcinoma:
Low grade High grade | |
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| Number of lymph nodes involved
Lesser omentum Greater omentum Other Lesser omentum Greater omentum Other | |
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Not applicable (pM | |
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Not identified Present Cannot be determined | |
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Not identified Present Cannot be determined | |
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No known presurgical therapy Present Complete response (no viable cancer cells) – score 0 Near complete response (single or rare small groups of cancer cells) – score 1 Partial response (evident tumor regression but more than single or rare small groups of cancer cells) – score 2 Poor or no response (no evident tumor regression) – score 3 Cannot be determined | |
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Chronic gastritis (lymphoid follicles, neutrophilic activity, erosion/ulceration) Glandular atrophy Intestinal metaplasia Dysplasia Polyps: specify type | |
| Add any relevant ancillary study performed | |
| Add any relevant comment |
Figure 5.Main histopathological subtypes of gastric cancer: (a) papillary and tubulo-papillary gastric adenocarcinoma (HE, magnification 10x); (b) tubular adenocarcinoma with solid (high grade) areas (HE, magnification 10x); (c) poorly cohesive gastric cancer of the signet ring cell type (HE, magnification 20x); this tiny intramucosal focus was found in a prophylactic gastrectomy specimen in a CDH1 variant carrier; (d) poorly cohesive gastric cancer not otherwise specified (HE, magnification 20x); in this case the poorly cohesive cells show pleomorphic and plasmacytoid features; (e) mucinous adenocarcinoma, with and signet ring cells floating in mucin lakes (HE, magnification 20x); (f) mixed gastric cancer (HE, magnification 20x).
Kodama’s Classification of growth patterns of early gastric cancer.
| Growth Patterns | |
|---|---|
| Intramucosal EGCs measuring < 4 cm | |
| Intramucosal EGCs minimally invading submucosa measuring < 4 cm | |
| Intramucosal EGCs measuring > 4 cm | |
| Intramucosal EGCs minimally invading submucosa measuring > 4 cm | |
| EGCs massively invading submucosa with nodular pattern measuring < 4 cm | |
| EGCs massively invading submucosa with saw tooth pattern measuring < 4 cm | |
EGC: early gastric cancer
Figure 6.Rare histopathological variant of gastric cancer: (a) gastric cancer with lymphoid stroma showing abundant lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate (HE, magnification 10x); this case was associated to EBV infection, as evaluated by EBER-in situ hybridization (inset); (b) hepatoid gastric carcinoma with numerous hyaline globules (HE, magnification 20x); (c) micropapillary gastric carcinoma, with artefactual spaces at the periphery of the nests and inverted cell polarity (HE, 20x); (d) adenosquamous gastric carcinoma (HE, magnification 20x).
Figure 7.Gastric cancer arising in a stomach with gastritis cystica profunda: in gastritis cystica profunda gastric epithelium is displaced into the gastric wall (upper image, HE, magnification 4x); note the presence of lamina propria-like stroma surrounding the cystically dilated gastric glands; this case was associated to well differentiated tubular gastric adenocarcinoma (middle image, HE, 10x) with a mucinous component (bottom image, HE, magnification 10x).
Hereditary syndromes affecting primarily the stomach.
| Syndrome | Genetic testing criteria | Recommended genetic testing | Histopathological findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| HDGC | At least 2 cases of GC in family regardless of age, with at least one diffuse GC At least 1 case of diffuse GC any age and ≥1 case of LBC < 70 years in different family members At least 2 cases of lobular breast cancer in family members < 50 years Diffuse GC < 50 years Diffuse GC at any age in individuals of Mãori ethnicity Diffuse GC at any age in individuals with a personal or family history (1st degree) of cleft lip/cleft palate History of diffuse GC and lobular breast cancer, both diagnosed < 70 years Bilateral lobular breast cancer, diagnosed < 70 years Gastric | Diffuse (poorly cohesive) GC and precursor lesions ( | |
| GAPPS | Phenotypic features: proximal polyposis with antral sparing; no evidence of colorectal or duodenal polyposis; > 100 polyps carpeting the proximal stomach in the index patient or > 30 polyps in a first-degree relative of another patient; predominantly FGPs and/or fundic gland-like polyps Proband or relative with either dysplastic FGPs or GC Mutation in the promoter 1B (YY1 binding motif) of APC gene Autosomal dominant patern of inheritance Spectrum of other histological features, including hyperproliferative aberrant pits, hyperplastic polyps, gastric-type adenomas | FGPs (with dysplasia) | |
| FIGC | Intestinal GC in three or more relatives; and One being a first-degree relative of the other two; and Two or more successive generations affected; and Intestinal GC <50 years in one or more patients; and Exclusion of gastric polyposis. Intestinal GC in two or more first-degree relatives; Intestinal GC in second-degree relatives, one diagnosed < 50 years Intestinal GC in three or more relatives at any age. GC in two or more relatives at any age; and At least one intestinal GC | NA | Intestinal GC |
FIGC, Familial Intestinal Gastric Cancer; GAPPS, Gastric Adenocarcinoma and Proximal Polyposis of the Stomach; GC, Gastric Cancer; HDGC, Hereditary Diffuse Gastric Cancer; HNPCC, Hereditary Non polyposis Colorectal cancer; IGCLC, International Gastric Cancer Linkage Consortium.