Cancer cell morphology at the invasive front and expression of cell adhesion-related carbohydrate in the primary lesion of patients with colorectal carcinoma with liver metastasis
Open Access
- 15 September 1996
- Vol. 78 (6), 1179-1186
- https://doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1097-0142(19960915)78:6<1179::aid-cncr3>3.0.co;2-5
Abstract
BACKGROUND Liver metastasis from colorectal carcinoma is an important problem in surgical treatment and profoundly affects the prognosis of patients. If it were possible to identify characteristic features in the primary lesion strongly related to liver metastasis, these could be used as prognostic markers for liver metastasis. To search for such features, the primary lesions of patients with colorectal carcinoma with liver metastasis were investigated. METHODS Three groups of colorectal carcinoma were examined: Group A with synchronous liver metastases; Group B with only lymph node metastases without recurrence for 5 years; and Group C with recurrence of liver metastases. Groups A and B included 24 cases and Group C, 20. We focused on cancer cell morphology at the invasive front and expression of sialyl Lewis X (sialyl LeX) in the primary cancer. RESULTS At the invasive front in Group A it was frequently found that polygonal, not columnar, cancer cells with a single or solitary trabecular form with indistinct polarity, showed an infiltrative growth pattern. This type of morphology was termed “focal dedifferentiation” and graded four levels. Eleven of 24 cases (46%) had severe focal dedifferentiation in Group A, 1 of 24 (4%) in Group B, and 6 of 20 (30%) in Group C. Sialyl Lex staining was positive in 12 of 24 cases (50%) in Group A, in 3 of 24 cases (13%) in Group B, and in 7 of 20 cases (35%) in Group C in the primary carcinoma. In respect to the staining of (sialyl Lex) at focal dedifferentiation, it was positive in 17 of 24 cases (71%) in Group A, in 4 of 24 cases (17%) in Group B and in 11 of 20 cases (55%) in Group C. Focal dedifferentiation and sialyl Lex staining in the primary cancer showed a significant difference between Groups A and B. Sialyl Lex staining at focal dedifferentiation showed a significant difference between Groups A and B and Groups B and C. Other adhesion related molecules, sialyl LeA and CEA, showed no difference among Groups A, B, and C. CONCLUSIONS Both focal dedifferentiation and expression of sialyl Lex antigen in the primary lesion are considered good markers for assessing the metastatic proclivity of colorectal cancer. Cancer1996;78:1179‐86.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pattern of recurrence after hepatic resection for colorectal metastasesBritish Journal of Surgery, 1993
- Metastatic Potential of Colon CarcinomaPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1990
- Microvascular Changes in the Stroma of Human Colorectal Carcinomas: Ultrastructural Histochemical StudyJapanese Journal of Cancer Research, 1989
- Hepatic metastases from colorectal cancer: Resection or notBritish Journal of Surgery, 1988
- Resection of Hepatic Metastases From Colorectal CancerArchives of Surgery, 1984
- The Natural History of Hepatic Metastases from Colorectal CancerAnnals of Surgery, 1984
- Adenocarcinoma of the proximal colon sites of initial dissemination and patterns of recurrence following surgery aloneCancer, 1984
- Patterns of recurrence following curative resection alone for adenocarcinoma of the rectum and sigmoid colonCancer, 1981
- Cancer Of The ColonAnnals of Surgery, 1967
- The classification of cancer of the rectumThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1932