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Haitao Xiao, Yong Sik Yoon, Seung-Mo Hong, Seon Ae Roh, Dong-Hyung Cho, Chang Sik Yu, Jin Cheon Kim, Poorly Differentiated Colorectal Cancers: Correlation of Microsatellite Instability With Clinicopathologic Features and Survival, American Journal of Clinical Pathology, Volume 140, Issue 3, September 2013, Pages 341–347, https://doi.org/10.1309/AJCP8P2DYNKGRBVI
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Abstract
To evaluate the association of microsatellite instability (MSI) with clinicopathologic features and oncologic outcomes in patients with poorly differentiated colorectal cancer (PD).
Study patients were divided into well-differentiated colorectal cancer (WD) and PD, which were compared according to histologic differentiation and MSI status.
Among 1,941 patients, PD was more frequent among microsatellite-unstable tumors (23.6%) than among microsatellite-stable (MSS) tumors (4.2%, P < .001). Patients with PD had worse 4-year overall survival rates than patients with WD (78.6% vs 88.2%, P = 0.010). Compared with MSS-PD tumors, MSI-PD tumors were characterized by right-colon predilection, larger size, and infrequent lymph node metastasis (P < .001 to P = .007).
The clinicopathologic characteristics of PD were closely associated with those of MSI. The outcomes of MSI-PD tumors were better than those of MSS-PD tumors, but this finding did not reach statistical significance.