4.6 Article

Sporadic fundic gland polyps with epithelial dysplasia - Evidence for preferential targeting for mutations in the adenomatous polyposis coli gene

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
Volume 161, Issue 5, Pages 1735-1742

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AMER SOC INVESTIGATIVE PATHOLOGY, INC
DOI: 10.1016/S0002-9440(10)64450-1

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Gastric fundic gland polyps (FGPs) occur in two distinct clinicopathological scenarios: sporadic and familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) associated. FAP-associated FGPs arise through somatic second hit alterations of the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene and frequently demonstrate epithelial dysplasia (Am J Pathol 2000, 157:747-754). Sporadic FGPs, in contrast, tend to contain beta-catenin gene mutations and only infrequently show dysplasia (Am J Pathol 2001, 158:1005-1010). However, sporadic FGPs with dysplasia have not been previously investigated. We studied 13 sporadic FGPs with surface/foveolar low-grade dysplasia or changes indefinite for dysplasia for alterations in the APC/beta-catenin pathway, using chromosome 5q allelic loss assays and direct DNA sequencing of the mutation cluster region in exon 15 of APC and the phosphorylation region in exon 3 of beta-catenin. In addition, to evaluate for possible additional genetic alterations in FGPs, all cases were evaluated for microsateltite instability using fluorescent-based amplification of a standard panel of five microsatellite markers. Alterations in APC were present in seven (53.8%) FGPs, including two cases with bi-allellic APC inactivation (truncating intragenic mutation plus 5q allelic loss), two cases with APC mutation only, and three cases with 5q allelic loss only. in contrast, only two (15.4%) FGPs contained stabilizing beta-catenin mutations. All 13 FGPs; were microsatellite stable. These results indicate that sporadic FGPs with dysplasia/indefinite for dysplasia are molecularly similar to FAP-associated FGPs, and are dissimilar to the more common sporadic nondysplastic FGPs. Mutations in APC and beta-catenin, despite occurring in the same genetic pathway, show differing biological properties, a phenomenon that has previously been demonstrated in colorectal neoplasms. The lack of microsatellite instability in FGPs in this study and of K-ras mutations in a previous study suggests that secondary genetic alterations are rare in both dysplastic and nondysplastic FGPs.

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