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Assessment of Adenomas Geraint Williams Pathology Department Cardiff University.

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Presentation on theme: "Assessment of Adenomas Geraint Williams Pathology Department Cardiff University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Assessment of Adenomas Geraint Williams Pathology Department Cardiff University

2 The great majority of lesions in the Screening Programme are small adenomas and hyperplastic polyps

3 Recognising adenomas Categorising adenomas Invasion Completeness of Excision Serrated lesions

4 Recognising adenomas Categorising adenomas Invasion Completeness of Excision Serrated lesions

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6 Size Villousness Dysplasia

7 Frequency of Carcinoma in Adenomas < 1 cm14791.3% 1-2 cm5809.5% > 2 cm43046.0% Muto et al 1975

8 Frequency of Carcinoma in Adenomas tubular18754.7% tubulovillous38022.4% villous23441.9% Muto et al 1975

9 Frequency of Carcinoma in Adenomas mild dysplasia17345.7% moderate dysplasia54918.0% severe dysplasia22334.5% Muto et al 1975

10 High Risk (‘Advanced’) Adenomas > 1 cm villous component severe dysplasia

11 As long as there is no invasive malignancy and excision is complete - No worries!

12 Rectosigmoid Adenoma Follow-Up 1618 patients followed for a mean of 14 years after removal of rectosigmoid adenomas: 49 (3%) developed colorectal cancer: 14 rectalSIR 1.2 (CI 0.7-2.1) (11/14 had incompletely excised adenomas) 35 colonic SIR 2.1 (CI 1.5-3.0) Atkin et al 1992

13 Risk of Subsequent Colon Cancer tubular1mild1.3 tubulovillous3.8moderate3.4 villous5.0severe3.3 <1 cm1.5 1 tumour1.7 1-2 cm2.2>2 tumours 4.8 >2 cm5.9

14 Risk of Subsequent Colon Cancer PatientsCancersSIR Low Risk Adenomas Single71240.6 Multiple6400 Total77640.5 High Risk Adenomas Single683202.9 Multiple159116.6 Total842313.6

15 Advanced Adenoma Patients > 1 cm villous component severe dysplasia multiple polyps

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17 Risk of Advanced Neoplasia 5.5yrs PatientsAd NeoRR No neoplasia29871 Tubular Adenoma <10mm622382.56 1-2496231.92 3+126155.01 Tubular Adenoma >10mm123196.40 Villous Adenoma81136.05 High Grade Dysplasia4686.87 Carcinoma23813.56 Lieberman et al 2007

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19 Even if there is no invasive malignancy and excision is complete - Grading of dysplasia and assessment of villousness in adenomas that are <10mm will govern surveillance So we’ve got to try hard to get it right!

20 Grading Dysplasia in 2189 Adenomas at 13 Centres minmaxmedian mild 29%88%42% moderate 10%67%43% severe 1%24%4%

21 Low grade and high grade

22 High Grade Dysplasia Expected in <5% of all adenomas Equates to ‘intramucosal adenocarcinoma’ Involves more than 1-2 glands

23 High Grade Dysplasia Recognition based primarily on ARCHITECTURE: COMPLEX glandular crowding and irregularity PROMINENT budding CRIBRIFORM ‘back-to-back’ glands INTRALUMINAL papillary tufting Low power diagnosis - epithelium is thick, blue, disorganised and ‘dirty’

24 High Grade Dysplasia CYTOLOGY: Loss of polarity and nuclear stratification Markedly enlarged nuclei Atypical mitoses Prominent apoptosis Usually more than one of these

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33 Histology of 2206 Adenomas at 13 Centres minmaxmedian tubular 62%93%84% tubulovillous 6%37%15% villous 0%6%1%

34 Reproducibility of Identifying Villousness –3 observers –Overall agreement61% Jensen et al 1995

35 Tubulovillous Adenomas The 20% Rule

36 Neoplastic Villi Classical Palmate Foreshortened May have prominent low grade mucinous epithelium

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47 Flat Adenomas –thickness does not exceed twice that of adjacent mucosa –more often right sided –usually small (<1cm) with tubular growth pattern –more often high grade dysplasia –40% contain carcinoma –uncommon because no chromoendoscopy Muto et al 1985

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50 National Polyp Study 1418 patients Complete colonoscopy with removal of adenomas No special attempt to identify flat adenomas Follow up colonoscopy, mean 5.9 years 97% clinical follow up, 80% colonoscopies 8401 patient years

51 National Polyp Study 90% reduction in colorectal cancer incidence all five colorectal cancers found on follow-up were polypoid

52 Macroscopic Examination & Trimming of Polyps Size - to nearest millimetre in formalin fixed specimen (whole polyps) Polypoid lesions Fixed intact Bisect through stalk if <10mm If larger, trim to leave central intact stalk At least three levels of stalk Sessile lesions pinned out and all-embedded after inking margins

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54 Serrated Lesions Hyperplastic polyp Serrated adenoma Mixed polyp Sessile serrated polyp Serrated carcinoma

55 Hyperplastic Polyps Formerly metaplastic polyps Left > right Male > female Infolded epithelial tufts and enlarged goblet cells No dysplasia Failure of anoikis (shedding of mature cells)

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57 Ki-67

58 Hyperplastic Polyp Increase in frequency with age 17 times commoner in colons with carcinoma Similar dietary and lifestyle risk factors to CRC K-ras mutation common Clonal Monocryptal?

59 Serrated Adenoma Dysplasia by definition Eosinophilic cytoplasm Pseudostratified, ‘pencillate’ nuclei May be tubular, tubulovillous or villous Invade to give serrated carcinoma Longacre & Fenoglio-Preiser 1990

60 ‘Traditional’ Serrated adenoma (TSA)

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62 Mixed Polyps Collision between hyperplastic polyp and adenoma Dysplasia in Hyperplastic Polyp Longacre & Fenoglio-Preiser 1990

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66 Sessile Serrated Polyp (Adenoma) Serrated polyps with unusual architectural features No conventional dysplasia but may have ‘nuclear atypia’ or ‘hypermucinous’ change Right colon Females > males Large sessile, poorly defined Torlakovic & Snover 1996

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68 Sessile serrated polyp

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72 Serrated Adenocarcinoma Serrated, mucinous or trabecular growth pattern Abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm Chromatin condensation Preserved polarity No necrosis

73 Tuppurainen K et al 2005 J Pathol 207: 285-94

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75 Serrated Neoplasia Microsatellite instability DNA methylation MLH1 inactivation BRAF mutation Baker K et al J Clin Pathol 2004; 57: 1089

76 BRAF mutation Typical adenomas0% Typical hyperplastic polyps19-78% Sessile serrated adenomas75-78% Traditional serrated adenomas20-66% Mixed Polyps57-89% HNPCC cancers0% All colorectal cancers15% MSI-high non-HNPCC cancers76%

77 Serrated Neoplasia Pathway Proximal hyperplastic polyp Sessile serrated polyp Serrated adenoma MSI-high, methylation-rich non-HNPCC “serrated” carcinoma (50% mucinous) Higuchi T & Jass JR 2004 J Clin Pathol 57: 682

78 1250 Polyps at Colonoscopy PolypDysplasia% AdenomaTubular+55 Tubulovillous+15 Villous+1 Serrated Hyperplastic-24.5 polypsSessile Serrated Polyp-2.5 Mixed Polyp+0.8 Serrated Adenoma+1.2

79 NBCSP Hyperplastic polyp Serrated adenoma Mixed polyp Sessile serrated polyp Serrated carcinoma

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