Kanthan Rani, Tharmaradinam Suresh, Asif Tehmina, Ahmed Shahid, Kanthan Selliah C
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon S7N 0W8, SK, Canada.
Division of Oncology, Saskatoon Cancer Centre, Saskatoon S7N 0W8, SK, Canada.
World J Gastroenterol. 2020 Sep 14;26(34):5181-5206. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v26.i34.5181.
Mixed tumors of the colon and rectum, composed of a combination of epithelial and endocrine elements of benign and malignant potential are rare neoplasms. These can occur anywhere in the gastrointestinal tract and are often diagnosed incidentally. Though they have been a well-documented entity in the pancreas, where the exocrine-endocrine mixed tumors have been known for a while, recognition and accurate diagnosis of these tumors in the colon and rectum, to date, remains a challenge. This is further compounded by the different terminologies that have been attributed to these lesions over the years adding to increased confusion and misclassification. Therefore, dedicated literature reviews of these lesions in the colon and rectum are inconsistent and are predominantly limited to case reports and case series of limited case numbers. Though, most of these tumors are high grade and of advanced stage, intermediate and low grade lesions of these mixed tumors are also increasingly been reported. There are no established independent consensus based guidelines for the therapeutic patient management of these unique lesions.
To provide a comprehensive targeted literature review of these complex mixed tumors in the colon and rectum that chronicles the evolution over time with summarization of historical perspectives of terminology and to further our understanding regarding their pathogenesis including genomic landscape, clinicoradiological features, pathology, treatment, prognosis, the current status of the management of the primary lesions, their recurrences and metastases.
A comprehensive review of the published English literature was conducted using the search engines PubMed, MEDLINE and GOOGLE scholar. The following search terms ["mixed tumors colon" OR mixed endocrine/neuroendocrine tumor/neoplasm/lesion colon OR adenocarcinoma and endocrine/neuroendocrine tumor colon OR mixed adenocarcinoma and endocrine/neuroendocrine carcinoma colon OR Amphicrine tumors OR Collision tumors] were used. Eligibility criteria were defined and all potential relevant items, including full articles and/or abstracts were independently reviewed, assessed and agreed upon items were selected for in-depth analysis.
In total 237 full articles/abstracts documents were considered for eligibility of which 45 articles were illegible resulting in a total of 192 articles that were assessed for eligibility of which 139 have been selected for reference in this current review. This seminal manuscript is a one stop article that provides a detailed outlook on the evolution over time with summarization of historical perspectives, nomenclature, clinicoradiological features, pathology, treatment, prognosis and the current status of the management of both the primary lesions, their recurrences and metastases. Gaps in knowledge have also been identified and discussed. An important outcome of this manuscript is the justified proposal for a new, simple, clinically relevant, non-ambiguous terminology for these lesions to be referred to as mixed epithelial endocrine neoplasms (MEENs).
MEEN of the colon and rectum are poorly understood rare entities that encompass an extensive range of heterogeneous tumors with a wide variety of combinations leading to tumors of high, intermediate or low grade malignant potential. This proposed new revised terminology of MEEN will solve the biggest hurdle of confusion and misclassification that plagues these rare unique colorectal neoplasms thus facilitating the future design of multi institutional prospective randomized controlled clinical trials to develop and evaluate newer therapeutic strategies that are recommended for continued improved understanding and personal optimization of clinical management of these unique colorectal neoplasms.
结直肠混合瘤由具有良性和恶性潜能的上皮和内分泌成分组成,是罕见的肿瘤。它们可发生于胃肠道的任何部位,常为偶然诊断。虽然在胰腺中,外分泌 - 内分泌混合瘤已被认识一段时间且有充分记录,但迄今为止,结直肠这些肿瘤的识别和准确诊断仍是一项挑战。多年来,这些病变被赋予了不同的术语,这进一步加剧了混淆和错误分类。因此,关于结直肠这些病变的专门文献综述并不一致,且主要限于病例报告和病例数有限的病例系列。尽管这些肿瘤大多为高级别且处于晚期,但这些混合瘤的中低级别病变也越来越多地被报道。目前尚无基于独立共识的针对这些独特病变的治疗患者管理指南。
对结直肠这些复杂的混合瘤进行全面的针对性文献综述,记录其随时间的演变,总结术语的历史观点,并加深我们对其发病机制的理解,包括基因组格局、临床放射学特征、病理学、治疗、预后、原发性病变管理的现状、复发和转移情况。
使用搜索引擎PubMed、MEDLINE和谷歌学术对已发表的英文文献进行全面综述。使用了以下搜索词["混合瘤 结肠" 或 混合内分泌/神经内分泌肿瘤/新生物/病变 结肠 或 腺癌和内分泌/神经内分泌肿瘤 结肠 或 混合腺癌和内分泌/神经内分泌癌 结肠 或 两性分泌肿瘤 或 碰撞肿瘤]。定义了纳入标准,所有潜在相关项目,包括全文和/或摘要,均由独立评审,评估并选定一致认可的项目进行深入分析。
总共237篇全文/摘要文献被考虑纳入,其中45篇不可读,最终共有192篇文献被评估纳入,本综述从中选取了139篇作为参考文献。这篇开创性的手稿是一篇一站式文章,详细阐述了随时间的演变,总结了历史观点、命名法、临床放射学特征、病理学、治疗、预后以及原发性病变、复发和转移管理的现状。还识别并讨论了知识空白。该手稿的一个重要成果是合理提议为这些病变采用一个新的、简单的、临床相关的、无歧义的术语,即混合上皮内分泌肿瘤(MEENs)。
结直肠MEEN是了解不足且罕见的实体,涵盖广泛的异质性肿瘤,有多种组合方式,导致具有高、中或低恶性潜能的肿瘤。提议的MEEN这一新修订术语将解决困扰这些罕见独特结直肠肿瘤的最大混淆和错误分类障碍,从而有助于未来设计多机构前瞻性随机对照临床试验,以开发和评估推荐的更新治疗策略,持续增进对这些独特结直肠肿瘤的理解并优化临床管理。