Cancers (Feb 2020)

The Clinicopathological Features and Genetic Mutations in Gastric Cancer Patients According to EMAST and MSI Status

  • Wen-Liang Fang,
  • Ming-Huang Chen,
  • Kuo-Hung Huang,
  • Shih-Ching Chang,
  • Chien-Hsing Lin,
  • Yee Chao,
  • Su-Shun Lo,
  • Anna Fen-Yau Li,
  • Chew-Wun Wu,
  • Yi-Ming Shyr

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12030551
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. 551

Abstract

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Background: There has been no report regarding the clinicopathological features and genetic mutations regarding elevated microsatellite alterations at selected tetranucleotide repeats (EMAST) in gastric cancer (GC). Methods: The correlation among EMAST status, microsatellite instability (MSI) status, mutations of common GC-related genes and 16 DNA repair-associated genes, and the clinicopathological features were analyzed. Results: Among the 360 GC patients enrolled, there were 76 (21.1%) with EMAST+ tumors and 284 with EMAST− tumors, and 59 (16.4%) were MSI-high (MSI-H) tumors, and 301 were microsatellite stable (MSS) tumors. Patients with EMAST+ tumors exhibited an earlier pathological T category and had more genetic mutations in the PI3K/AKT pathway, ARID1A and DNA repair-associated genes than those with EMAST− tumors. Patients with MSI-H tumors have more genetic mutations in the PI3K/AKT pathway and DNA repair-associated genes than those with MSS tumors. In the subgroup analysis for MSI-H GC, EMAST+ tumors were associated with earlier pathological T and N categories, earlier TNM stages, higher frequency of DNA-repair-associated genetic mutations, and a better survival rate than EMAST− tumors. Conclusions: PI3K/AKT pathway mutations may play an important role in EMAST+ and/or MSI-H GC. EMAST+/MSI-H tumors seem to represent a different subtype of gastric cancer from EMAST−/MSI-H tumors.

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