Involvement of microsatellite instability in lymph node metastasis of endometrial carcinoma.

Cancer Genet Cytogenet

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Jichi Medical School, 3311-1 Yakushiji, Minamikawachi, Kawachi, 329-0498, Tochigi, Japan.

Published: January 2002

We evaluated microsatellite instability (MSI) in primary lesions and lymph node metastatic lesions in 66 patients with endometrial carcinoma (FIGO stage IIIC) accompanied by lymph node metastasis. DNA was extracted from paraffin-embedded tissue of both the primary and lymph node metastatic lesions of endometrial carcinoma, and MSI was evaluated using microsatellite markers at five loci. Microsatellite instability was positive in the primary lesion in 27 patients (41%). All patients with MSI-positive primary lesions also showed MSI-positive in lymph node metastatic lesions. Of the other 39 patients with MSI-negative primary lesions, 4 showed MSI-positive in lymph node metastatic lesions. As the result of individual identification by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using short tandem repeat loci in these 4 patients, PCR profiles of primary and metastatic lesions matched with those of normal controls in all 4 patients. Therefore, it was confirmed that both primary and metastatic lesions developed from the same individual. These results suggest that MSI is also involved in lymph node metastasis in the development and/or progression of endometrial carcinoma in some patients.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0165-4608(01)00540-4DOI Listing

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