Morphological characterization of colorectal cancers in the Cancer Genome Atlas reveals distinct morphology-molecular associations: Clinical and biological implications Journal Article


Authors: Shia, J.; Schultz, N.; Kuk, D.; Vakiani, E.; Middha, S.; Segal, N. H.; Hechtman, J. F.; Berger, M. F.; Stadler, Z. K.; Weiser, M. R.; Wolchok, J. D.; Boland, C. R.; Gönen, M.; Klimstra, D. S.
Article Title: Morphological characterization of colorectal cancers in the Cancer Genome Atlas reveals distinct morphology-molecular associations: Clinical and biological implications
Abstract: The Cancer Genome Atlas data on colorectal carcinoma have provided a comprehensive view of the tumor's genomic alterations and their tumorigenic roles. Tumor morphology, however, has not been fully integrated into the analysis. The aim of this study was to explore relevant associations between tumor morphology and the newly characterized genomic alterations in colorectal carcinoma. Two hundred and seven colorectal carcinomas that had undergone whole-exome sequencing as part of The Cancer Genome Atlas project and had adequate virtual images in the cBioPortal for Cancer Genomics constituted our study population. Upon analysis, a tight association between 'microsatellite instability-high histology' and microsatellite instability-high (P<0.001) was readily detected and helped validate our image-based histology evaluation. Further, we showed, (1) among all histologies, the not otherwise specified type had the lowest overall mutation count (P<0.001 for entire cohort, P<0.03 for the microsatellite-instable group), and among the microsatellite-instable tumors, this type also correlated with fewer frameshift mutations in coding mononucleotide repeats of a defined set of relevant genes (P<0.01); (2) cytosine phosphate guanine island methylator phenotype-high colorectal cancers with or without microsatellite instability tended to have different histological patterns: the former more often mucinous and the latter more often not otherwise specified; (3) mucinous histology was associated with more frequent alterations in BRAF, PIK3CA, and the transforming growth factor-β pathway when compared with non-mucinous histologies (P<0.001, P=0.01, and P<0.001, respectively); and (4) few colorectal cancers (<9%) exhibited upregulation of immune-inhibitory genes including major immune checkpoints; these tumors were primarily microsatellite-instable (up to 43%, vs <3% in microsatellite-stable group) and had distinctly non-mucinous histologies with a solid growth. These morphology-molecular associations are interesting and propose important clinical implications. The morphological patterns associated with alterations of immune checkpoint genes bear the potential to guide patient selection for clinical trials that target immune checkpoints in colorectal cancer, and provide directions for future studies.
Journal Title: Modern Pathology
Volume: 30
Issue: 4
ISSN: 0893-3952
Publisher: Nature Research  
Date Published: 2017-04-01
Start Page: 599
End Page: 609
Language: English
DOI: 10.1038/modpathol.2016.198
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC5380525
PUBMED: 27982025
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 May 2017 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Jedd D Wolchok
    905 Wolchok
  2. Neil Howard Segal
    210 Segal
  3. Mithat Gonen
    1029 Gonen
  4. Zsofia Kinga Stadler
    391 Stadler
  5. David S Klimstra
    978 Klimstra
  6. Jinru Shia
    720 Shia
  7. Martin R Weiser
    538 Weiser
  8. Michael Forman Berger
    765 Berger
  9. Efsevia Vakiani
    264 Vakiani
  10. Deborah Kuk
    87 Kuk
  11. Nikolaus D Schultz
    487 Schultz
  12. Jaclyn Frances Hechtman
    212 Hechtman
  13. Sumit   Middha
    83 Middha