Epidemiology, pathogenesis, biology and evolving management of MSI-H/dMMR cancers Journal Article


Authors: Ambrosini, M.; Manca, P.; Nasca, V.; Sciortino, C.; Ghelardi, F.; Seligmann, J. F.; Taieb, J.; Pietrantonio, F.
Article Title: Epidemiology, pathogenesis, biology and evolving management of MSI-H/dMMR cancers
Abstract: Deficiency in DNA mismatch repair (dMMR) is a common pathway of carcinogenesis across different tumour types and confers a characteristic microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) molecular phenotype. The prevalence of the MSI-H/dMMR phenotype is highest in endometrial and colorectal cancers, and this phenotype is associated with a distinct tumour biology, prognosis and responsiveness to various anticancer treatments. In a minority of patients, MSI-H/dMMR cancers result from an inherited pathogenic variant in the context of Lynch syndrome, which has important implications for familial genetic screening. Whether these hereditary cancers have a different biology and clinical behaviour to their sporadic counterparts remains uncertain. Interest in this tumour molecular subtype has increased following the discovery of the high sensitivity of metastatic MSI-H/dMMR cancers to immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) in a histology-agnostic manner, which reflects the genomic hypermutation resulting from dMMR that renders these tumours highly immunogenic and immune infiltrated. This vulnerability is now also being exploited in early stage disease settings. Despite this common biological foundation, different MSI-H/dMMR cancers have histotype-specific features that correspond to their particular cell or tissue of origin, which might be associated with differences in prognosis and sensitivity to ICIs. In this Review, we provide an overview of the epidemiology, biology, pathogenesis, clinical diagnosis and treatment of MSI-H/dMMR tumours as a histology-agnostic cancer phenomenon. We also highlight peculiarities associated with specific pathogenetic alterations and histologies of MSI-H/dMMR tumours. © Springer Nature Limited 2025.
Keywords: genetics; pathogenesis; review; neoplasm; neoplasms; colorectal cancer; phenotype; prevalence; antineoplastic activity; pathology; carcinogenesis; colorectal neoplasms; cancer inhibition; colorectal tumor; mismatch repair; microsatellite instability; dna mismatch repair; immunogenicity; diagnosis; epidemiology; genetic screening; lynch syndrome; colorectal neoplasms, hereditary nonpolyposis; therapy; endometrium; hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer; etiology; immune checkpoint inhibitor; humans; human; female; immune checkpoint inhibitors; neoplastic cell transformation
Journal Title: Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology
Volume: 22
Issue: 6
ISSN: 1759-4774
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2025-01-01
Start Page: 385
End Page: 407
Language: English
DOI: 10.1038/s41571-025-01015-z
PUBMED: 40181086
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Review -- Source: Scopus
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