Original Research
Immunohistochemistry testing for mismatch repair deficiency in Stage 2 colon cancer: A cohort study of two cancer centres

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijsu.2018.01.020Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Study of dMMR and chemotherapy in 'real world' stage 2 in private and public hospitals.

  • Three-fold increase in dMMR testing from 2010 to 12 to 2013-15.

  • dMMR is more commonly seen in early stage disease, 34% of our stage 2 cohort.

  • dMMR identifies a subgroup of patients who do not need to consider chemotherapy.

  • Few treated with chemotherapy; especially younger patients with adverse risk factors.

Abstract

Background/Objectives

Adjuvant chemotherapy for Stage II colon cancer offers a small (2-3%) overall survival benefit and is not universally recommended. Mismatch repair deficiency (dMMR) confers an improved prognosis identifying patients unlikely to benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy. The aim of this study was to investigate the use of dMMR immunohistochemistry in two major cancer treatment centres.

Methods

Prospective data were collected on all patients with resected Stage II colon cancer between 2010 and 2015 across two large Australian hospitals. Data collected included patient demographics, tumour histology, dMMR immunohistochemistry, chemotherapy use, and outcomes.

Results

All 355 patients (56.1% female, median age 81) with resected Stage 2 Colon cancer entered on to the surgical database were included in this analysis. MMR testing was performed on 167 patient samples (47%), most occurred post-2013 (73.1% vs. 26.9% patients). dMMR rates were 34.1%. 25 (7.3%) received adjuvant chemotherapy, with no patient >80 years receiving treatment. Presence of ≥2 high-risk feature increased the likelihood of adjuvant chemotherapy. Only 3.6% dMMR patients received chemotherapy; both were young with high-risk features. 27/288 (7.6%) patients (with follow up) relapsed, with 7 disease-free post-resection of metastatic disease, 9 are alive with metastatic disease, and 11 deceased.

Conclusions

Unlike clinical trial populations, Stage 2 colon cancer patients are often elderly, have high rates of dMMR tumours, are rarely offered chemotherapy, yet still have excellent outcomes. dMMR immunohistochemistry is being increasingly used to identify Stage 2 patients who do not require chemotherapy.

Keywords

Colorectal cancer
Chemotherapy
Mismatch repair deficiency
Immunohistochemistry

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