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Microsatellite Instability in Russian Patients with Colorectal Cancer
Authors:Vitaly Shubin  Yury Shelygin  Sergey Achkasov  Oleg Sushkov  Ilya Nazarov  Alexey Ponomarenko  Iuliia Alimova  Anna Loginova  Aleksey Tsukanov
Affiliation:Ryzhikh National Medical Research Center of Coloproctology, 123423 Moscow, Russia; (Y.S.); (S.A.); (O.S.); (I.N.); (A.P.); (I.A.); (A.L.)
Abstract:The aim of this study was to determine the characteristics of Russian patients with microsatellite instability (MSI) tumors. MSI in the tumor was determined in 514 patients with colon cancer using PCR and subsequent fragment analysis for five markers (NR21, NR24, BAT25, BAT26, and NR27). In the presence of microsatellite instability, the mismatch repair (MMR) system genes were examined using the NGS and MLPA methods to establish the diagnosis of Lynch syndrome. The overall frequency of MSI tumors was 15%: at stage I—19% (9/48), at stage II—21% (44/213), at stage III—16% (26/160), and at stage IV—2% (2/93). Patients with MSI tumors differed in the age of diagnosis, tumor localization, time of cancer recurrence, and stage of the disease. The overall and disease-free survival of patients whose tumors had MSI status was higher than that of patients with microsatellite-stable status, p = 0.04 and p = 0.02, respectively. Analysis of overall and disease-free survival of patients with Lynch syndrome and patients with sporadic colon cancer, but with MSI status, did not reveal significant differences, p = 0.52 and p = 0.24, respectively. The age of patients with Lynch syndrome was significantly younger than that of patients with sporadic colon cancer whose tumors had MSI status (p < 0.001).
Keywords:microsatellite instability   colorectal cancer   Lynch syndrome
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