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abstract
High-level
microsatellite instability (MSI-high) is found in approximately 15% of
all colorectal adenocarcinomas (CRCs) and in at least 20% of right-sided
cancers. It is most commonly due to somatic hypermethylation of the
MLH1 gene promoter region, with familial cases (Lynch syndrome)
representing only 2% to 3% of CRCs overall. In contrast to CRC, MSI-high
in appendiceal adenocarcinomas is rare. Only 4 MSI-high appendiceal
carcinomas and 1 MSI-high appendiceal serrated adenoma have been
previously reported, and the prevalence of MSI in the appendix is
unknown. We identified 108 appendiceal carcinomas from MD Anderson
Cancer Center in which MSI status had been assessed by
immunohistochemistry for the DNA mismatch-repair proteins MLH1, MSH2,
MSH6, and PMS2 (n=83), polymerase chain reaction (n=7), or both (n=18).
Three cases (2.8%) were MSI-high, and 1 was MSI-low. The 3 MSI-high
cases included: (1) a poorly differentiated nonmucinous adenocarcinoma
with loss of MLH1/PMS2 expression, lack of MLH1 promoter methylation,
and lack of BRAF gene mutation, but no detected germline mutation in
MLH1 from a 39-year-old man; (2) an undifferentiated carcinoma with loss
of MSH2/MSH6, but no detected germline mutation in MSH2 or TACSTD1,
from a 59-year-old woman; and (3) a moderately differentiated mucinous
adenocarcinoma arising in a villous adenoma with loss of MSH2/MSH6
expression, in a 38-year-old man with a strong family history of CRC who
declined germline testing. When the overall group of appendiceal
carcinomas was classified according to histologic features and precursor
lesions, the frequencies of MSI-high were: 3 of 108 (2.8%) invasive
carcinomas, 3 of 96 (3.1%) invasive carcinomas that did not arise from a
background of goblet cell carcinoid tumors, and 0 of 12 (0%) signet
ring and mucinous carcinomas arising in goblet cell carcinoid tumors.
These findings, in conjunction with the previously reported MSI-high
appendiceal carcinomas, highlight the low prevalence of MSI in the
appendix as compared with the right colon and suggest that MLH1 promoter
methylation is not a mechanism for MSI in this location.
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