Nash G M, Gimbel M, Shia J, Culliford A T, Nathanson D R, Ndubuisi M, Yamaguchi Y, Zeng Z S, Barany F, Paty P B
Department of Surgery, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Ave, New York, NY 10021, USA.
J Clin Oncol. 2003 Aug 15;21(16):3105-12. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2003.11.133.
In a series of hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) patients, we evaluated the sensitivities of the individual microsatellites recommended by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) consensus workshop for detection of high-frequency microsatellite instability (MSI-H). On the basis of this evaluation, we developed a three-marker assay that assigns microsatellite instability (MSI) in a multiplex polymerase chain reaction.
Individual marker sensitivity was assessed in 18 HNPCC tumors. Multiplex and NCI assays were then assessed in a series of 120 patients with early-onset colon cancer.
The sensitivity of microsatellite markers BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, and D17S250 for ASI in HNPCC cancers was 100%, 94%, 72%, 50%, and 50%, respectively. The three most accurate markers were combined and optimized in a multiplex assay that assigned MSI-H whenever at least two of three markers revealed ASI. In early-onset colon cancers, the prevalence of MSI-H determined by the multiplex assay and by the NCI assay was 16% and 23%, respectively. The additional MSI-H tumors and patients with MSI-H identified by the NCI assay lacked the traits characteristic of MSI-H seen in tumors and patients identified by the multiplex assay: retention of heterozygosity (NCI additional 22% v multiplex 84%; P =.003), characteristic tumor morphology (0% v 64%; P =.006), and 5-year cancer survival rate (44% v 100%; P =.0003).
The multiplex assay identifies colon cancers with MSI-H by assessing three highly accurate microsatellite markers. This assay identifies a smaller MSI-H cohort with more homogeneous clinical features and is superior as a marker of favorable prognosis. It merits prospective evaluation as a marker of prognosis and as a screening test for HNPCC.
在一系列遗传性非息肉病性结直肠癌(HNPCC)患者中,我们评估了美国国立癌症研究所(NCI)共识研讨会推荐的用于检测高频微卫星不稳定性(MSI-H)的各个微卫星的敏感性。基于该评估,我们开发了一种三重标记检测法,可在多重聚合酶链反应中确定微卫星不稳定性(MSI)。
在18例HNPCC肿瘤中评估各个标记的敏感性。然后在一系列120例早发性结肠癌患者中评估多重检测法和NCI检测法。
微卫星标记BAT25、BAT26、D2S123、D5S346和D17S250在HNPCC癌症中对MSI的敏感性分别为100%、94%、72%、50%和50%。将三个最准确的标记组合并在多重检测法中进行优化,只要三个标记中的至少两个显示MSI,就判定为MSI-H。在早发性结肠癌中,通过多重检测法和NCI检测法确定的MSI-H患病率分别为16%和23%。NCI检测法额外鉴定出的MSI-H肿瘤和MSI-H患者缺乏多重检测法鉴定出的肿瘤和患者中所见的MSI-H特征:杂合性保留(NCI额外鉴定出的为22%,多重检测法为84%;P = 0.003)、特征性肿瘤形态(0%对64%;P = 0.006)和5年癌症生存率(44%对100%;P = 0.0003)。
多重检测法通过评估三个高度准确的微卫星标记来鉴定MSI-H的结肠癌。该检测法鉴定出的MSI-H队列较小,临床特征更均一,作为良好预后的标志物更具优势。它值得作为预后标志物和HNPCC筛查试验进行前瞻性评估。