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Università degli Studi di Pavia AA 2005 - 2006 Corso Integrato Geriatria ed Oncologia Insegnamento Oncologia Medica GASTRIC CANCER. I. Prof. Alberto Riccardi GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA * incidence and mortality rates markedly ↓ over past 70 yrs; - 1930: gastric cancer → 1st cause of cancer - related deaths in American men (by a factor of 2) and 3rd cause in women (behind tumors of uterine cervix and breast); - in USA, mortality dropped in men from 28 to 5.0 and in ↓ worldwide); women from 27 to 2.3 / 100,000 population (↓ * nonetheless, in 1996, 22,800 new cases diagnosed and 11,800 pts died; * incidence varies widely among different countries, being comparatively high in Japan, China, Chile, and Ireland (with still decreased incidence and mortality) GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA (Cancer Statistics, 2000, females) * age - adjusted death rates for gastric cancer in 2000 in 45 countries [no = per 100,000 population (rank among 45 countries)]; - rates in USA, Canada and United Kingdom compared with selected countries (including 15 countries with highest death rates) GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA (Cancer Statistics, 2000, males) * age - adjusted death rates for gastric cancer in 2000 in 45 countries [no = per 100,000 population (rank among 45 countries)]; - rates in USA, Canada and United Kingdom compared with selected countries (including 15 countries with highest death rates) GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA (Cancer Statistics, females, 2003) * age - adjusted cancer death rates in USA from 1930 to 1999 in selected sites: - steady ↓ in death rates for stomach, breast and colorectal cancers; - from 1960 to 1998, continual ↑ in death rates for lung cancer stomach GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA (Cancer Statistics, males, 2003) * age - adjusted cancer death rates in United States from 1930 to 1999 in selected sites; ; - similar ↓ in death rates from gastric cancer; - ↑ in death rates for lung cancer from 1930 to 1990 with a continual decrease during the 1990s stomach GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Epidemiology * an environmental exposure, beginning early in life, probably related to development of GC, with dietary carcinogens being most likely factor(s): - risk of GC greater among lower socio economic classes; - migrants from high - to low - incidence nations maintain their susceptibility to GC (while risk for their offspring ~ that of new homeland) RISK FACTORS AND PATHOGENESIS GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Risk factors. I. * diet (high in dry salted, smoked or preserved foods and low in fruits and vegetables); * bacteria (including Helicobacter pylori infection); * advanced age; * male gender; * atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia; * pernicious anemia; * cigarette smoking; * Menetrier's disease (giant hypertrophic gastritis), and * gastric adenomatous polyps and familial polyposis GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Etiology. I. Diet and bacteria * relationship between dietary patterns and development of GC: - long - term ingestion of high concentrations of nitrates in dried, smoked and salted foods; - bacteria convert nitrates to carcinogenic nitrites (= nitrosamines) Nitrate - converting bacteria as a factor in causation of gastric carcinoma GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Etiology. II. Bacteria and favoring growth factors * exogenous bacteria (= partially decayed foods, especially consumed by lower socioeconomic classes); - endogenous bacteria (such as Helicobacter pylori), whose growth results from loss of gastric acidity: * favoring factors: - partial gastrectomy to control benign peptic ulcer disease (15 - 20 yrs earlier) abolishes acid - producing cells of gastric antrum; - achlorhydria, atrophic gastritis and pernicious anemia (= precancerous situations) in elderly (in pts with atrophic gastritis, usual gastric mucosa replaced by intestinal - type cells → intestinal metaplasia → cellular atypia and eventual neoplasia) HELICOBACTER PYLORI IN A GASTRIC PIT ˚ NATURAL HISTORY OF HELICOBACTER PYLORI INFECTION. I. * HP found worldwide (prevalence, up 100%, in developing countries; * HP products in stomach mucosa control acidity of environment and induce inflammation → several gastric diseases (weakening of mucosal barrier eventually result in ulceration); * major cause of chronic gastritis and associated with duodenal ulcer (90% of pts), gastric ulcer (70% of pts) and ?gastric cancer (?60% of pts) NATURAL HISTORY OF HELICOBACTER PYLORI INFECTION. II. * most HP strains (= type I; e.g. strain 26695) causing disease contain cag (= cytotoxin associated Ag) chromosomal pathogenicity island (~ 37,000 bp and 29 genes); - cag island splits into 2 parts, with most cag arranged genes involved in secretory machinery translocating protein CagA (cytotoxin * most genes involved in 2 major processes: associated Ag A) into cytoplasm of gastric - translocation of CagA from bacterium to host cell epithelial cells; - production of IL - 8 (chemotactic for neutrophils and lymphocytes and angiogenic) by gastric cells NATURAL HISTORY OF HELICOBACTER PYLORI INFECTION. III. * HP usually acquired in childhood; * acute HP infection (gray) → transient, rarely diagnosed hypo chlorhydria; - persistent infection → chronic gastritis (green) in most pts (80 90%, without symptoms); * variable further clinical course: hypocloridria - pts with ↑ acid output (red) → antral gastritis predisposing to duodenal ulcer; - pts with ↓ acid output (black) → gastritis in stomach’s body predisposing to gastric ulcer and (more rarely) to gastric carcinoma; [* HP infection induces mucosa - associated lymphoid tissue (MALT), possibly leading to malignant lymphoma] Pathogen - host interactions in pathogenesis of HP infection. I. * integral role of host response to HP in induction of damage to gastric epithelium: - during early phase of infection, binding of HP to epithelial cells (EC) (especially by BabA and by strains harboring cag pathogenicity island) → production of IL - 8 and other chemokines by EC [e.g., epithelial cell - derived neutrophil - activating peptide 78 (ENA - 78) and growth related oncogene (GRO - α)]; - nuclear factor - κB (NF - κB) and early - response transcription factor activator protein 1 (AP - 1) = intracellular messengers involved in this process Pathogen - host interactions in pathogenesis of HP Infection. II. * chemokines secreted by epithelial cells bind to proteoglycan scaffolding → gradient by polymorphonuclear cells (PMN) are recruited; * chronic phase of HP gastritis associates an adaptive lymphocyte response with initial innate response; [- lymphocyte recruitment facilitated by chemokine mediated expression of vascular addressins [e.g., vascular - cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM - 1)] and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM - 1), required for lymphocyte extravasation] Pathogen - host interactions in pathogenesis of HP Infection. III. * macrophages participating in IL 8 production → proinflammatory cytokines involved in activation of recruited cells [especially T helper cells (Th0, Th1, Th2), that respond with a biased Th1 response to HP; - in turn, Th1 - type cytokines such as interferon - γ (INF - γ) → expression of class II major histocompatibility complexes (MHC) and accessory molecules B7 - 1 and B7 - 2 by epithelial cells → epithelial cells competent for antigen presentation Pathogen - host interactions in pathogenesis of HP infection. IV. * tumor necrosis factor - α (TNF- α) (red) ↑ cytotoxin VacA- and Fas- mediated apoptosis induced by → disruption of epithelial barrier → facilitation of translocation of bacterial antigens → further activation of macrophages (cytokines produced by macrophages also alter mucus secretion → HP mediated disruption of mucous layer); * cytokines produced in gastric mucosa (green) → changes in gastric - acid secretion / homeostasis (dashed lines); β and IFN - γ ↑ gastrin * TNF - α, IL - 1β release, stimulating parietal and enterochromaffin cells and thus acid secretion; * TNF- α also induces ↓ no. of antral D cells → decreased somatostatin production = indirectly ↑ acid production (LPS = lipopolysaccharide) Potential outcomes of sequencing of Helicobacter pylori genome GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Etiology. III. Other factors * gastric ulcers and adenomatous polyps (but unconvincing data on a cause / effect relationship = e.g., inadequate clinical distinction between benign gastric ulcers and small ulcerating GC); - Menetrier's disease (extreme hypertrophy of gastric rugal folds mimics polypoid lesions, but does not represent true adenomatous polyps); - blood group A have ↑ incidence of GC than blood group 0 individuals (possibly due to # in mucous secretion of various ABO groups → greater or lesser mucosal protection from carcinogens); - no association between duodenal ulcers and GC PATHOLOGY GASTRIC CANCER Pathology. I. * 85% = adenocarcinomas (diffuse and intestinal type); * 15% = non - Hodgkin's lymphomas and gatrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST, formerly called “leiomyosarcomas”) GASTRIC CANCER Pathology. II. Polyps GASTRIC CANCER Pathology. III. Leiomyoma (gastrointestinal stromal cell tumor, GIST?) GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. IV. Carcinoma, diffuse type * cell cohesion absent, with individual cells infiltrating and thickening stomach wall without forming a discrete mass; - more often in younger pts, develops throughout stomach, including cardias → loss of distensibility of gastric wall (“linitis plastica” or "leather bottle" appearance), with a far more ominous prognosis GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. V. Carcinoma, diffuse type * right: low power view, with poorly differentiated cancer arising from mucosa and diffusely infiltrating all layers of gastric wall; * left: ↑ magnification, with effacement of lamina propria of gastric mucosa GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. VI. Carcinoma, diffuse type * linitis plastica carcinoma diffusely infiltrates entire gastric wall without forming an intraluminal mass; * wall typically thickened ~ 2 - 3 cm, with leathery, inelastic consistency GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. VII. Carcinoma, diffuse type Linitis plastica (scirrhous) GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. VIII. Carcinoma, diffuse type GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. IX. Carcinoma, diffuse type GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. X. Carcinoma, intestinal type cohesive neoplastic cells forming gland like tubular structures: - frequently ulcerative; - more commonly in antrum - prepylorus, cardia - fundus and lesser curvature of stomach, and - often preceeded by prolonged pre cancerous process * GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XI. Carcinoma, signet ring cells GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XII. Neuroendocrine carcinoma typical light and electron microscopy of carcinoid tumor, with numerous, fairly uniformly sized neurosecretory granules GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XIII. Borrmann gross classification I = polypoid; II = ulcerating; III = ulcerating infiltrating; IV = infiltrating GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XIV. Ulcerating carcinoma GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XV. Ulcerating carcinoma GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XVI. Polypoid carcinoma GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XVII. Polypoid carcinoma Carcinoma of cardia Carcinoma of fundus GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XVIII. Polypoid carcinoma Carcinoma of antrus GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XIX. Topography antrum and prepylorus cardia and fundus lesser curvature greater curvature entire stomach ~ 30% ~ 35% ~ 20% ~ 3 - 5% ~ 5 - 10% GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XX. * ↓ incidence of cancer of distal half of stomach (especially intestinal type); - no ↓ in diffuse type GC (10% of pts); * cancer of cardia and gastroesophageal junction rising (dramatically under 40 yrs, in last 2 decades) “EARLY” GASTRIC CANCER GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XXI. Early gastric cancer * early gastric cancer = depth of invasion limited to mucosa or submucosa, regardless of LN involvement (gross pathology: type I = polypoid; type IIa = elevated; type IIb = flat; type IIc = depressed; type III = excavated); * advanced gastric cancer = disease penetrates muscolar layer, usually associated with contiguous or distant spread [gross pathology (Borrmann classification): I = polypoid; III = ulcerating; III = ulcerating - infiltrating; IV = infiltrating] GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XXII. Early gastric cancer * early GC → limited to mucosa and submucosa; * advanced GC → tumor penetrates beyond submucosa GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XXIII. Early gastric cancer macroscopically divided into three types GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XXIV. Early gastric cancer, elevated GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XXV. Early gastric cancer, excavated GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XXVI. Is early gastric cancer an “early” stage of advanced gastric cancer * ?early gastric cancer could be a different disease than advanced gastric cancer (because an inability to invade); * observation indicating that early gastric cancer becomes advanced gastric cancer: - retrospective analysis of sequential X rays; - pts who refused surgery for early gastric cancer and developed advanced cancer; - animal studies GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Pathology. XXVII. * % of pts with GC with lymph node involvement ↑ as depth of invasion ↑ from mucosa to serosa; * 5 - yr survival ↓ as depth of invasion ↑ GENETICS GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Genetics. I. incidence of diffuse GC similar in most populations; - intestinal GC predominates in high - risk geographic regions (accounting for declining of GC); * different etiologic factor(s) involved in these two subtypes? * GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Genetics. II. * multiple genetic and epigenetic alterations in oncogenes, tumour - suppressor genes, cell cycle regulators, cell adhesion molecules, DNA repair genes, genetic instability and telomerase activation implicated in multistep process of human stomach carcinogenesis; - combinations of alterations # in two histological types of GC → distinct carcinogenetic pathways in well - differentiated (intestinal - type GC) and poorly differentiated (diffuse - type GC) GENETIC STEPS OF GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA GENETIC STEPS OF INTESTINAL TYPE GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA GENETIC STEPS OF DIFFUSE TYPE GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Diffuse type GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Genetics. III. Intestinal - type GC * in multistep process of intestinal - type carcinogenesis, genetic pathway divided into 3 subpathways: - intestinal metaplasia → adenoma → carcinoma; - intestinal metaplasia → carcinoma, and - de novo; * infection with HP is a strong trigger for hyperplasia of hTERT+ (human telomerase reverse transcriptase, regulating human telomers and senescence) “stem cells” in intestinal metaplasia Telomeres and telomerase * telomere = extension of DNA at chr ends, generated by telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT, which uses an internally bound RNA loop as a template); [usually, “Hayflick limit” of ~ 50 - 70 division cycles for human diploid cells mediated by telomere length] Schematic structure of telomere - repair complex and location of mutations * TERC, TERT, dyskerin, NOP10, NHP2 and GAR1 constitute telomerase ribo nucleoprotein complex; * mutations of amino acids denoted by their single - letter codes Yamaguchi H et al N Engl J Med 2005; 352: 1413 - 24 GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Genetics. IV. Intestinal - type GC * infection with HP is a strong trigger for hyperplasia of hTERT+ (Human Telomerase Reverse Transcriptase, regulating human telomers and cell senescence) “stem cells” in intestinal metaplasia → adenoma → carcinoma sequence; → replication * genetic instability and hyperplasia of hTERT+ “stem cells”→ error (at D1S191 locus), DNA hypermethylation (D17S5 locus), pS2 loss, β loss, CD44 abnormal transcripts and p53 mutation; RARβ - all these epi- and genetic alterations in > 30% of incomplete intestinal metaplasias and common in intestinal - type GC GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Genetics. V. Intestinal - type GC * adenoma → carcinoma sequence in ~ 20% of gastric adenomas, with additional events including APC and p53 mutations, loss of heterozygosity (LOH), reduced p27 and cyclin E expression and presence of c met 6.0 - kb transcripts; * advanced intestinal - type gastric cancer associated with further events (including c - erbB gene amplification, DCC loss, 1q LOH, p27 loss, reduced tumour growth factor (TGF) - β type I receptor expression and reduced nm23 expression) GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Genetics. V. Intestinal - type GC * de - novo pathway for carcinogenesis of well - differentiated GC involves LOH and abnormal expression of p73 gene (responsible for development of foveolar - type gastric cancers with pS2 expression) GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Genetics. VI. Diffuse - type GC * loss of E - cadherin, LOH at chr 17p and mutation or LOH of p53 preferentially involved in development of poorly differentiated GC ROLE OF CADHERINS IN ESTABLISHING MOLECULAR LINKS BETWEEN ADJACENT CELLS * cadherin dimers gather at adherens junctions to form a zipper - like structure that maintains adjacent cells in close contact; * cadherins linked to cytoskeleton through cytoplasmic catenins (essential for normal cadherin function and formation of adherens junctions); - cadherin linked to β - catenin (or related plakoglobin) and α catenin associated with actin microfilaments GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Genetics. VII. Diffuse - type GC, Hereditary forms germline mutations in E - cadherin (CDH1) gene (on chr 16, inherited in autosomal dominant pattern and coding for cell adhesion proteins) linked to high incidence of occult gastric cancers in young asymptomatic carriers → ~ 70% lifetime risk for hereditary diffuse gastric adeno carcinoma * Model for development of hereditary diffuse gastric cancer * gastric mucosa in CDH1 (E - cadherin gene) germline mutation carriers is normal until second CDH1 allele is inactivated or repressed (second hit) by transcriptional downregulation; [- promoter hypermethylation is one mechanism for downregulation (transcription factor mediated events also play a role, including environmental and physiological factors such as diet, carcinogen exposure, ulceration and gastritis)]; - since downregulation may occur in multiple cells, multifocal tumors develop; - tumor expands slowly until additional genetic events, possibly combined with an altered microenvironment → clonal expansion and disease progression; [- because second hit does not involve somatic, irreversible, mutation of second CDH1 allele, it is possible that early stage lesions is reversible] RECEPTOR TYROSINE KINASE AND PROLIFERATION AND TISSUE EXPANSION * receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) = main positive regulators of proliferation and tissue expansion (through downstream pathways including ras - MAPK and PI3K / Akt cascade); * RTKs negatively act on E - cadherin function → disassembly of adherens junctions; - downstream elements of RTK signalling interact and activate Rho family GTPases (Rac, Rho, Cdc42) system that interfere with cadherin - mediated adhesion through changes in actin cytoskeleton; * catenin p120 acts as regulator of cadherin function either promoting or repressing E - cadherin - dependent adhesion Pedigrees fulfilling Hereditary Diffuse Gastric Cancer (HDGC) criteria (examples) * ≥ 2 pathologically documented cases of diffuse gastric cancer in 1st- or 2nd- degree relatives, with ≥ 1 diagnosed at < 50 yrs; * ≥ 3 pathologically documented cases of diffuse gastric cancer in 1st- or 2nd - degree relatives of any age SCHEMA TO GUIDE THE MANAGEMENT OF FAMILIAL GASTRIC CANCER KINDREDS FAMILY WITH PREDICTIVE GENETIC - TESTING (A) AND SEQUENCE CHROMATOGRAM OF CDH1 (EXON 12) (B) A) squares = male and circles = female members; - = unaffected and = affected persons; - slash = death and line under symbol = prophylactic gastrectomy; - + sign = mutation+, - sign = mutation-, in parentheses = result of predictive testing; - arrow identifies proband [age at diagnosis and death (in parentheses) under each symbol]; B) codon 598 in yellow; - pt IV - 2 = wild - type sequence and pt IV - 1 = heterozygous for C2095T mutation; [- Opa = opal nonsense mutation (one of 3 nonsense codons predicting protein truncation) (NL = normal sequence and Mut = mutation; N in nucleotide chromatogram indicates that both C and T are present)] GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Genetics. VIII. from prophylactic gastrectomy in pts to regular endoscopic surveillance with multiple random biopsies → presence of microscopic intrahepitelial carcinomas → early total gastrectomy for this small pt’s population (lack of other effective early tumor detection with less aggressive approaches) * Early diffuse gastric cancers from prophylactic - gastrectomy specimens A) superficial infiltrate of signet - ring carcinoma cells (EE staining); B) immunohistochemistry with Abs to type IV collagen = invasive nature of signet - cell infiltrates (thick basement membrane under surface epithelium and around both glands and capillaries stains strongly; no distinct staining around signet - ring cells); C) signet - ring - cells infiltrate in superficial lamina propria in gastric cardia (PAS with diastase staining for mucina); D) epithelial nature of infiltrate (immunohistochemistry for cytokeratin); E) in situ signet - ring - cell lesions in gastric cardia; F, G, H) early diffuse gastric cancers (EE) CLINICAL FEATURES GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Clinical features. I. * usually no symptoms when superficial and surgically curable; * with more extensive tumors → insidious upper abdominal discomfort (from a vague, postprandial fullness to severe, steady pain), anorexia (often with slight nausea) and weight loss; * no early physical sign (finding of a palpable abdominal mass generally indicates long - standing growth and regional extension) GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Clinical features. II. * possible early symptoms (with superficial and surgically curable tumors); - nausea and vomiting (with tumors of pylorus); - dysphagia (with lesions of cardia); GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Clinical features. III. * iron - deficiency anemia in men and of occult blood in stool in both sexes → search for an occult lesion in gastrointestinal tract (especially in pts with atrophic gastritis or pernicious anemia); * unusual clinical features: - migratory thrombophlebitis; - microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, and - acanthosis nigricans GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Clinical features. IV. Acanthosis nigricans GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Clinical features. V. Acanthosis nigricans GASTRIC ADENOCARCINOMA Clinical features. VI. Acanthosis nigricans