Increased endocrine cells in treated rectal adenocarcinomas: A possible reflection of endocrine differentiation in tumor cells induced by chemotherapy and radiotherapy Journal Article


Authors: Shia, J.; Tickoo, S. K.; Guillem, J. G.; Qin, J.; Nissan, A.; Hoos, A.; Stojadinovic, A.; Ruo, L.; Wong, W. D.; Paty, P. B.; Weiser, M. R.; Minsky, B. D.; Klimstra, D. S.
Article Title: Increased endocrine cells in treated rectal adenocarcinomas: A possible reflection of endocrine differentiation in tumor cells induced by chemotherapy and radiotherapy
Abstract: The presence of focal endocrine cells in colorectal adenocarcinoma is a relatively common phenomenon. However, endocrine differentiation in treated adenocarcinomas of the gastrointestinal tract has received little attention. We noted striking numbers of cells with endocrine morphology and phenotype in the residual tumor of six randomly encountered cases of rectal adenocarcinoma that were subjected to neoadjuvant therapy. All six cases had a substantial treatment response (≥50%). To validate our initial observation and to explore its clinicopathologic significance, further morphologic and immunohistochemical studies were performed on 53 cases of rectal adenocarcinomas treated with preoperative radiation with (33 cases) or without (20 cases) chemotherapy. Pretreatment biopsies from 20 of the 53 cases and 79 resection specimens of rectal adenocarcinoma that received no neoadjuvant therapy were used as controls. Chromogranin positivity was identified in the posttreatment resection specimens in 36 of the 53 study cases (67.9%). Twenty of the 36 showed positive staining in ≥20% of the residual tumor cells. The chromogranin-positive cells in these cases often formed cords or nests. On hematoxylin and eosin sections these cells had markedly eosinophilic cytoplasm and round and uniform or sometimes pleomorphic nuclei with an often dense chromatin pattern. The proportion of chromogranin-positive cells was significantly associated with the extent of treatment response (p = 0.0005). Tumors treated with both chemotherapy and radiotherapy were more likely to have abundant chromogranin-positive cells compared with tumors treated with radiotherapy alone (p = 0.0004). In contrast, only 30% of the pretreatment biopsies and 17.7% of the control resection specimens of untreated rectal carcinomas showed chromogranin-positive cells, predominantly arranged as scattered individual positive cells, constituting <10% of the tumor. No significant correlation was observed between pretreatment and posttreatment specimens with regard to chromogranin positivity (p = 1.0). Ten of 15 patients (66.7%) whose resection specimens showed positive chromogranin staining failed to demonstrate any chromogranin positivity in their pretreatment biopsy specimens. In addition, groups or nests of chromogranin-positive cells noted in posttreatment specimens showed a very low Ki67 labeling index (<5%) but showed a frequency of abnormal p53 protein expression comparable with that observed in tumor foci resembling conventional adenocarcinoma (66.7% vs 62.5%). Our findings demonstrate that there is an increased frequency and density of cells with an endocrine phenotype in rectal adenocarcinomas that were subjected to neoadjuvant therapy and that the extent of endocrine cells appears proportional to the degree of treatment response. The possible mechanism for the increased endocrine cells in treated rectal adenocarcinomas may be related to induction of endocrine differentiation in tumor cells by cytotoxic insult.
Keywords: immunohistochemistry; adult; cancer chemotherapy; clinical article; controlled study; human tissue; treatment outcome; treatment response; aged; aged, 80 and over; middle aged; human cell; fluorouracil; cancer adjuvant therapy; cancer radiotherapy; adenocarcinoma; ki 67 antigen; ki-67 antigen; phenotype; cell structure; tumor differentiation; cell differentiation; cytotoxicity; protein p53; minimal residual disease; folinic acid; tumor suppressor protein p53; eosin; hematoxylin; cell density; rectum carcinoma; rectal neoplasms; endocrine cell; chromogranin; random allocation; rectal adenocarcinoma; eosinophil; rectum biopsy; endocrine differentiation; chromogranins; humans; human; male; female; article; enteroendocrine cells
Journal Title: American Journal of Surgical Pathology
Volume: 26
Issue: 7
ISSN: 0147-5185
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins  
Date Published: 2002-07-01
Start Page: 863
End Page: 872
Language: English
DOI: 10.1097/00000478-200207000-00004
PUBMED: 12131153
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Export Date: 14 November 2014 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Philip B Paty
    496 Paty
  2. Bruce Minsky
    306 Minsky
  3. Leyo Ruo
    32 Ruo
  4. Axel Hoos
    28 Hoos
  5. Jing Qin
    86 Qin
  6. Aviram Nissan
    20 Nissan
  7. Satish K Tickoo
    483 Tickoo
  8. Jose Guillem
    414 Guillem
  9. David S Klimstra
    978 Klimstra
  10. Jinru Shia
    717 Shia
  11. Martin R Weiser
    534 Weiser
  12. Douglas W Wong
    178 Wong