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Unclassified mucin phenotype of gastric adenocarcinoma exhibits the highest invasiveness
Author(s) -
Han Hye S,
Lee SunYoung,
Lee Kyung Y,
Hong Sung N,
Kim Jeong H,
Sung InKyung,
Park Hyung S,
Jin Choon J,
Min Young I
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of gastroenterology and hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.214
H-Index - 130
eISSN - 1440-1746
pISSN - 0815-9319
DOI - 10.1111/j.1440-1746.2008.05670.x
Subject(s) - mucin , phenotype , cancer , adenocarcinoma , helicobacter pylori , pathology , medicine , stomach , gastroenterology , carcinogenesis , mucin 2 , biology , cancer research , gene , genetics , gene expression
Abstract Background and Aim: Gastric cancers present with distinctive carcinogenesis pathways that vary with the mucin phenotypes. We attempted to elucidate the relations between the characteristics of the mucin phenotypes of gastric cancer and the tumor invasiveness. Methods: Gastric adenocarcinomas that were resected surgically between August 2005 and April 2007 were included in the present study. The gastric cancers were subclassified into gastric and intestinal mucin phenotypes if more than 10% of cancer cells exhibited gastric (MUC5AC and/or MUC6) and intestinal (MUC2 or CD10) markers, respectively. Results: The mucin phenotypes of 123 gastric cancers were gastric ( n = 31), intestinal ( n = 43), mixed ( n = 28) and unclassified ( n = 21). The mucin phenotype was related to histological type ( P < 0.001), Lauren's classification ( P = 0.001) and size ( P = 0.014) of the gastric adenocarcinoma, but not to its location or to the presence of Helicobacter pylori infection. The unclassified mucin phenotype exhibited the largest number of lymph node metastases ( P = 0.007), lymphatic invasions ( P < 0.001) and neural invasions ( P = 0.026), whereas the intestinal mucin phenotype exhibited the lowest invasiveness. Conclusion: The mucin phenotype reflects the biological behavior of gastric cancer, with the intestinal and unclassified mucin phenotypes exhibiting the lowest and highest invasiveness, respectively.