Immunohistochemical detection of ARID1A in colorectal carcinoma: Loss of staining is associated with sporadic microsatellite unstable tumors with medullary histology and high TNM stage Journal Article


Authors: Ye, J.; Zhou, Y.; Weiser, M. R.; Gonen, M.; Zhang, L.; Samdani, T.; Bacares, R.; DeLair, D.; Ivelja, S.; Vakiani, E.; Klimstra, D. S.; Soslow, R. A.; Shia, J.
Article Title: Immunohistochemical detection of ARID1A in colorectal carcinoma: Loss of staining is associated with sporadic microsatellite unstable tumors with medullary histology and high TNM stage
Abstract: AT-rich interactive domain-containing protein 1A (ARID1A), a chromatin remodeling gene recently discovered to be a tumor suppressor in ovarian cancers, has been found to be mutated at low frequencies in many other tumors including colorectal carcinoma (CRC). An association between ARID1A alteration and DNA mismatch repair (MMR) deficiency has been implicated; understanding this association may facilitate the understanding of the role of ARID1A in the various tumors. In this pilot study, we analyzed the immunohistochemical expression of ARID1A in a consecutive series of 257 CRCs that fulfilled a set of relaxed criteria for Lynch syndrome screening; 59 (23%) were MMR deficient by immunohistochemistry (44 MLH1/PMS2 deficient, 9 MSH2/MSH6 deficient, 4 MSH6 deficient, and 2 PMS2 deficient). ARID1A loss was observed in 9% (22/257) of the cohort: 24% of MMR-deficient tumors (14/59, 13 of the 14 being MLH1/PMS2 deficient) and 4% of MMR-normal tumors (8/198) (P <.05). MLH1 (mutL homolog 1) promoter hypermethylation was observed in 10 of the 13 MLH1/PMS2-deficient/ARID1A-loss tumors, indicating an association between ARID1A loss and sporadic microsatellite unstable CRCs. Among the MMR-deficient cases, ARID1A loss correlated with old age (P =.04), poor tumor differentiation (P <.01), medullary histology (P <.01), and an increased rate of nodal and distant metastasis (P =.03); these patients also trended toward a worse 5-year overall survival. Among MMR-normal tumors, no differences in clinicopathological features were detected between the groups stratified by ARID1A. In conclusion, our results suggest that ARID1A loss may be linked to a specific subset of sporadic microsatellite unstable CRCs that may be medullary but is more likely to present with metastatic disease, warranting further investigation.
Keywords: immunohistochemistry; adult; protein expression; unclassified drug; major clinical study; promoter region; cancer staging; tumor differentiation; histology; distant metastasis; colorectal carcinoma; colon cancer; microsatellite instability; senescence; tissue microarray; adenosine triphosphate; protein methylation; hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer; medullary carcinoma; human; male; female; article; mlh1 and pms2; mlh1 methylation; at rich interactive domain containing protein 1a
Journal Title: Human Pathology
Volume: 45
Issue: 12
ISSN: 0046-8177
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2014-12-01
Start Page: 2430
End Page: 2436
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.humpath.2014.08.007
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 25311944
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 2 January 2015 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Mithat Gonen
    1031 Gonen
  2. Liying Zhang
    129 Zhang
  3. David S Klimstra
    978 Klimstra
  4. Jinru Shia
    720 Shia
  5. Martin R Weiser
    540 Weiser
  6. Robert Soslow
    797 Soslow
  7. Efsevia Vakiani
    265 Vakiani
  8. Deborah F DeLair
    106 DeLair
  9. Ruben Bacares
    18 Bacares
  10. Jiqing Ye
    3 Ye
  11. Yi Zhou
    5 Zhou
  12. Sinisa   Ivelja
    9 Ivelja