MICROSATELLITE INSTABILITY AT MULTIPLE LOCI IN GASTRIC-CARCINOMA - CLINICOPATHOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS AND PROGNOSIS

Citation
Nr. Dossantos et al., MICROSATELLITE INSTABILITY AT MULTIPLE LOCI IN GASTRIC-CARCINOMA - CLINICOPATHOLOGICAL IMPLICATIONS AND PROGNOSIS, Gastroenterology, 110(1), 1996, pp. 38-44
Citations number
25
Categorie Soggetti
Gastroenterology & Hepatology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00165085
Volume
110
Issue
1
Year of publication
1996
Pages
38 - 44
Database
ISI
SICI code
0016-5085(1996)110:1<38:MIAMLI>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
Background & Aims: Microsatellite instability (replication error [RER] -positive phenotype) is a frequent genetic alteration in gastric carci nomas, The clinical relationship between RER-positive and RER-negative gastric tumors is poorly characterized, The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between the number of altered microsatell ite loci and the clinicopathologic features of gastric carcinoma, Meth ods: Five or 6 microsatellite loci were analyzed in 61 gastric carcino mas using polymerase chain reaction. Results: Twenty-one carcinomas (3 4.4%) had microsatellite instability: 7 at 1 locus, 2 at 2 loci, and 1 2 at multiple loci, The comparison between the three groups (with none , 1 or 2, and more than 2 RER-positive loci) showed that RER-negative carcinomas and carcinomas with 1 or 2 RER-positive loci share features that differ from those of carcinomas with multiple RER-positive loci, The latter were all of the intestinal or atypical subtype acid had lo wer DNA content, more prominent lymphoid infiltration, and less preval ent nodal metastases than carcinomas in the other two groups. The pati ents with carcinomas showing multiple RER-positive loci had a better p rognosis, Conclusions: The finding of microsatellite instability in a single or few loci does not qualify a case as a mutator phenotype from a clinical standpoint, Gastric tumors with multiple RER-positive loci have a particular clinicopathologic profile leading to a better outco me.