Immunohistochemistry Versus Microsatellite Instability Testing in Phenotyping Colorectal Tumors
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Abstract
Results
Of 1,144 tumors tested, 818 showed intact expression of hMLH1 and hMSH2. Of these, 680 were microsatellite stable (MSS), 27 were MSI-H, and 111 were MSI-L. In all, 228 tumors showed absence of hMLH1 expression and 98 showed absence of hMSH2 expression: all were MSI-H.
Conclusion
IHC in colorectal tumors for protein products hMLH1 and hMSH2 provides a rapid, cost-effective, sensitive (92.3%), and extremely specific (100%) method for screening for DNA mismatch repair defects. The predictive value of normal IHC for an MSS/MSI-L phenotype was 96.7%, and the predictive value of abnormal IHC was 100% for an MSI-H phenotype. Testing strategies must take into account acceptability of missing some cases of MSI-H tumors if only IHC is performed.
Citation impact
735
total citations
- FWCI
- 29.45
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- 100%
- References
- 47
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Microsatellite instability
- Immunohistochemistry
- DNA mismatch repair
- Colorectal cancer
- Medicine
- Microsatellite
- Phenotype
- Cancer
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Good health and well-being
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