Lymphoglandular Complex-Like Colorectal Carcinoma-A Series of 20 Colorectal Cases, Including Newly Reported Features of Malignant Behavior. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Distinguishing colon carcinoma that is surrounded by well-circumscribed lymphoid tissue from adenomas involving lymphoglandular complexes can be difficult. We assessed a multi-institutional international cohort of 20 colorectal carcinomas with associated prominent lymphoid infiltrates, which we referred to as lymphoglandular complex-like carcinoma (LGCC). We collected clinical and endoscopic features, including lesion size, endoscopic appearance, location, procedure, follow-up, AJCC stage, and mismatch repair status. We recorded the presence of the following histologic features: haphazard gland distribution, gland angulation, gland fusion, solid nest formation, single-cell formation, stromal desmoplasia, presence of lymphovascular invasion and perineural invasion, presence of lamina propria, cytologic atypia as low- or high-grade, presence of goblet cells in the invasive component, and the presence of a surface lesion. Most cases (9 of 13) were described endoscopically as sessile polyps with an average size of 1.56 cm. Most cases (90%) were associated with a surface lesion, of which the majority were tubular adenomas, though a subset was associated with sessile serrated lesions with dysplasia (3 of 18). All cases of LGCC demonstrated haphazard gland distribution and either gland angulation, fusion, or solid nest formation. A portion of cases demonstrated single-cell infiltration (35%) and desmoplasia (50%), and rarely lymphovascular invasion was present (5%). A subset (10%) of cases invaded beyond the submucosa. Deficient mismatch repair was present in 22% (2 of 9) of cases for which it was performed. In cases of colectomy or completion colectomy, nodal metastasis was present in 38% (3 of 8). No cases demonstrated disease recurrence or disease-specific mortality. Overall, LGCC represents an enigmatic subset of carcinomas that is important to distinguish from adenomas involving lymphoglandular complexes due to its varying prognostic outcomes.

publication date

  • October 17, 2023

Research

keywords

  • Adenoma
  • Carcinoma
  • Colonic Polyps
  • Colorectal Neoplasms

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85180531717

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1097/PAS.0000000000002141

PubMed ID

  • 38054635

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 48

issue

  • 1