4.5 Article

Selection of Endometrial Carcinomas for DNA Mismatch Repair Protein Immunohistochemistry Using Patient Age and Tumor Morphology Enhances Detection of Mismatch Repair Abnormalities

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SURGICAL PATHOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 6, Pages 925-933

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/PAS.0b013e318197a046

Keywords

endometrial carcinoma; microsatellite instability; Lynch syndrome; HNPCC

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Women with hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) have a high risk for endometrial cancer (EC) and frequently present with a gynecologic cancer as their first Or sentinel malignancy. Identification of these patients is important given their personal and family risk for synchronous and metachronous tumors. The revised Bethesda Guidelines provide screening criteria for HNPCC in colorectal cancers. However there are currently no such screening recommendations for women with endometrial carcinoma. We applied some of the colorectal cancer screening criteria, including age and tumor morphology, to endometrial endometrioid carcinoma. The purpose of this study was to describe patient and tumor characteristics and to assess the ability of these criteria to enhance detection of mismatch repair (MMR) deficiency, and hence HNPCC in EC. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) for DNA mismatch repair (IHC-MMR) proteins was performed in a defined Subset of patients with EC. This included women younger than 50 years of age and women >= 50 years whose tumors showed morphologic features suggestive of MMR deficiency (TM-MMR). The extent of IHC-MMR in the older patient group was compared with that in it comparison group of EC >= 50 years that was previously analyzed for microsatellite instability status. Seventy-one patients met the selection criteria for IHC testing; 32 (45%,) showed abnormal results. The rate of IHC abnormality in the younger group was approximately 30%, with a nearly equal distribution of MLH1/PMS2 and MSH2/MSH6 abnormalities. In the older age group, TM-MMR triggered IHC analysis in 31 of 34 cases. Of these. IS cases showed loss of IHC-MMR (58% of cases), 7 with loss of MSH2/MSH6. In contrast, the rate of microsatellite instability in the comparison group was only 21%, The IHC abnormal group showed more frequent tumor infiltrating lymphocytes, dedifferentiated EC, more tumors centered in the lower uterine segment, and more frequent synchronous clear Cell carcinomas of file ovary than tumors with a normal immunophenotype type. Although many of the patients loss IHC-MMR showed personal and/or history (13 of 32) of HNPCC-associated tumors, most did not. Tumor morphology (TM-MMR) along with IHC-MMR enhances the detection of EC patients A risk of HNPCC.

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