articleClinical Cancer ResearchMar 22, 2016Closed access

Improved Risk Assessment by Integrating Molecular and Clinicopathological Factors in Early-stage Endometrial Cancer—Combined Analysis of the PORTEC Cohorts

Leiden University Medical Center · University Medical Center Utrecht · +4 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Results

Molecular analyses were feasible in >96% of the patients and confirmed the four molecular subgroups: p53-mutant (9%), MSI (26%), POLE-mutant (6%), and NSMP (59%). Integration of prognostic molecular alterations with established clinicopathologic factors resulted in a stronger model with improved risk prognostication. Approximately 15% of high-intermediate risk patients had unfavorable features (substantial lymphovascular space invasion, p53-mutant, and/or >10% L1CAM), 50% favorable features (POLE-mutant, NSMP being microsatellite stable, and CTNNB1 wild-type), and 35% intermediate features (MSI or CTNNB1-mutant).

Conclusions

Integrating clinicopathologic and molecular factors improves the risk assessment of patients with early-stage endometrial carcinoma. Assessment of this integrated risk profile is feasible in daily practice, and holds promise to reduce both overtreatment and undertreatment. Clin Cancer Res; 22(16); 4215-24. ©2016 AACR.

Citation impact

844
total citations
FWCI
43.55
Percentile
100%
References
34
Citations per year

Authors

12

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Microsatellite instability
  • Endometrial cancer
  • Oncology
  • PTEN
  • Internal medicine
  • Lymphovascular invasion
  • Stage (stratigraphy)
  • Medicine
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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Funding