| Literature DB >> 35254485 |
Doenja M J Lambregts1, Nino Bogveradze2,3,4, Lennart K Blomqvist5, Emmanouil Fokas6,7, Julio Garcia-Aguilar8, Bengt Glimelius9, Marc J Gollub10, Tsuyoshi Konishi11, Corrie A M Marijnen12,13, Iris D Nagtegaal14, Per J Nilsson15, Rodrigo O Perez16, Petur Snaebjornsson17, Stuart A Taylor18, Damian J M Tolan19, Vincenzo Valentini20, Nicholas P West21, Albert Wolthuis22, Max J Lahaye2, Monique Maas2, Geerard L Beets3,23, Regina G H Beets-Tan24,25,26.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To identify the main problem areas in the applicability of the current TNM staging system (8th ed.) for the radiological staging and reporting of rectal cancer and provide practice recommendations on how to handle them.Entities:
Keywords: Consensus; Guideline; Magnetic resonance imaging; Neoplasm staging; Rectal neoplasms
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35254485 PMCID: PMC9213337 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-022-08591-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 7.034
Fig. 1Study outline
Main characteristics of the survey respondents
| No. of participants | % | |
|---|---|---|
| 321 | 100% | |
| Netherlands | 86 | 27% |
| UK | 51 | 16% |
| USA | 24 | 8% |
| Portugal | 17 | 5% |
| Australia | 15 | 5% |
| India | 14 | 4% |
| Sweden | 13 | 4% |
| Italy | 12 | 4% |
| Brazil | 11 | 3% |
| Other (< 10 per country)* | 78 | 24% |
| Radiologist | 255 | 79% |
| Abdominal radiologist with specific expertise in rectal MRI | 103 | 32% |
| Abdominal radiologist | 87 | 27% |
| General radiologist | 39 | 12% |
| Resident | 26 | 8% |
| Surgeon | 34 | 11% |
| Radiation oncologist | 16 | 5% |
| Pathologist | 6 | 2% |
| Other** | 10 | 3% |
| TNM 8 | 201 | 63% |
| TNM 7 | 77 | 24% |
| Older version (TNM 6 or older) | 2 | 1% |
| None | 10 | 3% |
| Unknown | 31 | 10% |
*Other countries with < 10 respondents included Argentina, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, China, Denmark, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Israel, Korea, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Romania, Scotland, Serbia, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland, Ukraine
**Other professions included medical oncologist (n = 7), gastroenterologist (n = 2), and PhD researcher (n = 1)
Survey results
Respondents were asked to assign a cT stage for each case | ||
| Case 01: tumor limited to the bowel wall (i.e., cT1–2) | 100% | cT1-2 |
| Case 02: tumor penetrating the wall and extending into perirectal fat, wide margin between tumor and MRF (i.e., cT3) | 98% | cT3 |
| Case 03: tumor invading the seminal vesicles and prostate (i.e., cT4b) | 97% | cT4b |
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| Case 05: tumor extending into the perirectal fat, invading the anterior peritoneal reflection (i.e., cT4a) | 94% | cT4a |
| Case 06: tumor extending into the perirectal fat, invading the peritoneum above the peritoneal reflection (i.e., cT4a) | 89% | cT4a |
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Respondents were asked to assign a cT stage for each case | ||
Respondents were asked to determine for each case whether the MRF was involved (MRF+) or not involved (MRF−) | ||
| Case 12: tumor extending into perirectal fat (below peritoneal reflection), distance of 0 mm between tumor and MRF (i.e., MRF+) | 96% | MRF+ |
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| Case 16: tumor extending into perirectal fat posteriorly (above peritoneal reflection), distance of 0 mm between tumor and MRF (i.e., MRF+) | 86% | MRF+ |
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| Case 18: N+ lymph node with extracapsular extension directly adjacent to MRF | 85% | MRF+ |
For case 19–21, respondents were asked to classify each shown lesion as a lymph node or deposit For case 22–27, respondents were asked to assign a cN stage (cN1a, cN1b, cN1c, cN2a, cN2b) for each case | ||
| Case 19: nodular lesion in mesorectum | 89% | node |
| Case 20: irregular mass in mesorectum | 84% | deposit |
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| Case 22: single metastatic node in mesorectum (i.e., cN1a) | 98% | cN1a |
| Case 23: two metastatic nodes in mesorectum (i.e., cN1b) | 94% | cN1b |
| Case 24: single tumor deposit in mesorectum (no additional nodes) (i.e., cN1c) | 92% | cN1c |
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| Case 26: seven metastatic lymph nodes in mesorectum (i.e., cN2b) | 95% | cN2b |
| Case 27: four metastatic lymph nodes in mesorectum (i.e., cN2a) | 94% | cN2a |
Respondents were asked to determine whether lymph nodes were regional (N) or non-regional (M) | ||
| Case 28: mesorectal lymph node (i.e., regional) | 100% | regional |
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| Case 30: external iliac lymph node (i.e., non-regional) | 80% | non-regional |
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| Case 32: common iliac lymph node (i.e., non-regional) | 85% | non-regional |
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| Case 34: inguinal node in mid-rectal | 96% | non-regional |
Respondents were asked to assign a cM stage (cM1a, cM1b, cM1c) | ||
| Case 35: common iliac lymph node metastasis (i.e., cM1a) | 94% | cM1a |
| Case 36: liver + para-aortic lymph node metastases (i.e., cM1b) | 94% | cM1b |
| Case 37: unilateral lung metastases (right lung) (i.e., cM1a) | 84% | cM1a |
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| Case 39: liver + renal + spleen metastases (i.e., cM1b) | 86% | cM1b |
| Case 40: peritoneal metastases (i.e., cM1c) | 97% | cM1c |
| Case 41: peritoneal + liver metastases (i.e., cM1c) | 97% | cM1c |
Note, cases that did not reach ≥ 80% consensus among survey respondents are printed in bold and were defined as “problem areas”
*In cases related to cT staging, the answer options cT1, cT2, and cT12 (unable to differentiate between cT1 and cT2) were grouped together for calculation of agreement. In all other cases, agreement was calculated based on individual answer options.
Problem areas and expert panel recommendations
| How to categorize cT stage in low-rectal cancers involving the anal canal or pelvic floor? | • cT stage should be defined primarily based on the extent of tumor invasion at the level of the rectum. • Involvement of the internal sphincter and intersphincteric plane should • Involvement of the external sphincter, puborectalis, and/or levator ani muscles should be categorized as cT4b disease (=skeletal muscle invasion). • Separate from cT-stage categorization, in any low-rectal tumor, a rectal MRI report should include a detailed prose description of whether and to what extent the tumor invades the different anatomical layers of the anal sphincter and/or pelvic floor. Any involvement of the anal canal should also be routinely included in the conclusion of the report, preferably as a suffix. For example cT… (anal+), or cT… (anal−) when there is no involvement. • Note, in order to properly assess involvement of the anal canal, availability of a good-quality high-resolution coronal T2-weighted imaging sequence planned parallel to the anal canal is paramount. |
| How to categorize cT stage in case of mesorectal fascia (MRF) involvement and/or involvement of the peritoneum or peritoneal reflection? | • Below the anterior peritoneal reflection, the mesorectum is covered by the MRF circumferentially. The MRF is not a synonym for peritoneum, and involvement of (but not beyond) the MRF should be classified as cT3 MRF+ disease. • At and above the level of the anterior peritoneal reflection, the mesorectum is partly covered by peritoneum anteriorly (mid rectum) and anterolaterally (high rectum). When the peritoneum (or peritoneal reflection) is invaded, this constitutes cT4a disease and the MRF should |
| Definition of cT4b disease | • cT4b includes invasion of: - pelvic organs including uterus, ovaries, vagina, prostate, seminal vesicles, bladder, ureters, urethra, bone - skeletal/striated muscle (incl. obturator, piriformis, ischiococcygeus, levator ani, puborectalis, and external anal sphincter) - sciatic or sacral nerves - sacrospinous/sacrotuberous ligaments - any vessel outside the mesorectal compartment - any loop of small or large bowel in the pelvis (separate from the primary site from which the tumor originates) - any extramesorectal fat in an anatomical compartment of the pelvis outside the mesorectum, i.e., beyond the mesorectal fascia (obturator, para-iliac, or ischiorectal) • - The mesorectal fascia (=cT3 MRF+) - The peritoneum including the anterior peritoneal reflection (=cT4a) - The internal anal sphincter and intersphincteric space (=cT1/2/3 anal+) |
| Which distance between tumor and MRF defines an “involved” MRF and should we consider the sub-category of a “threatened” MRF? | • Direct invasion of the MRF by the primary tumor or a margin of ≤ 1 mm between the primary tumor and MRF should be considered MRF+ (involved MRF). • The definition of a “threatened” MRF (1–2 mm) should be discarded. |
| How to stage the MRF in case of tumor-bearing structures (lymph nodes, deposits, EMVI) other than the primary tumor involving the MRF? | • MRF should be considered as - primary tumor - EMVI - tumor deposits or irregular pathologic nodes (i.e. nodes with extracapsular extension) • MRF should be considered as - Enlarged lymph nodes without any signs of extracapsular extension (i.e. smooth enlarged nodes) • In cases with an involved MRF, it is useful to include a suffix in the conclusion of the radiology report, describing whether the cause of involvement was the primary tumor or another structure, e.g., “MRF+ (primary)” of “MRF+ (non-primary).” |
| Which nodal stations should be considered as “regional” versus “non-regional”? | • Regional lymph nodes (that together define the cN stage) include mesorectal nodes and nodes in the mesocolon of the distal sigmoid colon (including nodes along the superior rectal artery and vein), obturator nodes, and internal iliac nodes. • Non-regional lymph nodes (to be considered as part of the cM stage) include external iliac and common iliac nodes. • Inguinal lymph nodes are typically considered non-regional (cM stage) nodes. In tumors extending into the anal canal below the level of the dentate line, inguinal nodes may still be considered regional / cN-stage nodes (as indicated by the AJCC-TNM8). • Radiologists should specify the location of suspicious regional lymph nodes and explicitly mention the presence of any cN+ nodes along the superior rectal artery/vein (incl. the level of the most proximal suspicious lymph node) and in the obturator and internal iliac space to inform proper radiotherapy and surgical treatment planning. • Obturator, internal iliac, and external iliac nodes are commonly referred to as the “lateral nodes.” The anatomical map in Fig. |
| Which criteria to use for characterization of lateral lymph nodes? | • At primary staging, a threshold of ≥ 7 mm (short-axis diameter) may be used as a criterion to diagnose cN+ nodes in the obturator and internal iliac compartments (as proposed by the Lateral Node Consortium [ • Unlike in mesorectal nodes, morphologic criteria (shape, border contour, signal heterogeneity) should • The panel does not support the thresholds of > 4 mm (internal iliac) and > 6 mm (obturator) to diagnose yN+ nodes post-CRT as proposed by the Lateral Node Study Consortium [ ° The panel, however, acknowledges that at the time of writing there is no alternative evidence available to suggest different criteria. Hence, clinicians may choose to take the criteria proposed by the Lateral Node Study Consortium into account. Patients with potentially suspicious lateral nodes post-CRT should always be discussed individually by a multidisciplinary team. |
| How to report and differentiate lymph nodes versus tumor deposits on imaging? | • There is to date insufficient evidence to know whether imaging can accurately differentiate between lymph nodes and tumor deposits. • The COMET trial (UK) is currently investigating specific criteria to discriminate between lymph nodes and tumor deposits on MRI [ • Meanwhile, the panel advises to report any nodules discontinuous from the tumor (regardless whether considered as nodes or deposits) as part of the cN stage and to provide a prose description of the size and aspect of these lesions in the report. |
| How to define cM stage in case of metastases in paired organs? | • cM1a disease is defined as the presence of metastatic disease in only one site/organ. Multiple metastases within one organ, even if the organ is paired (lungs, ovaries, kidneys), still constitutes M1a disease. |
Fig. 2Left: survey results showing substantial variation in assessment of cT staging in cases with various degrees of anal sphincter or pelvic floor invasion. Right: panel recommendations stating not to include the internal sphincter (IS) and intersphincteric space (ISS) in cT-stage categorization, and to consider invasion of external sphincter (ES), puborectalis, and levator ani muscles (i.e., skeletal muscles) as cT4b disease
Fig. 3Anatomical overview of the lining of the mesorectal compartment by the MRF and peritoneum in the low, middle, and high parts of the rectum. Above the anterior peritoneal reflection, the mesorectum is lined by peritoneum anteriorly (mid) and anterolaterally (high). The remaining mesorectum is lined by the MRF. Invasion of the MRF constitutes cT3 MRF+ disease, while invasion of the peritoneum or peritoneal reflection constitutes cT4a disease. When both the peritoneum and MRF are involved, this constitutes cT4a MRF+ disease
Fig. 4Anatomical boundaries of lateral lymph node stations (external iliac, internal iliac, obturator) on MRI. EIA = external iliac artery, EIV = external iliac vein, IIA = internal iliac artery, IIV = internal iliac vein. The border between the internal iliac and obturator compartments is defined by the lateral border of the main trunk of the internal iliac vessels (II–IV). The posterior wall of the EIV defines the border between the external iliac and obturator plus internal iliac compartments (II–VI). *The infrapiriformis foramen represents the transit point of the internal iliac vessels from the internal iliac compartment into the pudendal canal (V). This figure is largely based on a map previously published by Ogura et al JAMA Surg 2019;254: e192172 (supplement) [26]