Background: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a heterogeneous disease with complex etiology. New prognostic factors for this group of disease need to be investigated. This study evaluated the histopathological significance and prognostic impact of tumor budding in CRC.

Design: A total of 60 treatment naive consecutive patients undergoing surgical resection for CRC during the period of January 2011 to December 2013 were included in the study. Details of each patient related to their demographic and tumor profile were recorded. Pan Cytokeratin immunohistochemistry was applied on chosen sections and tumor budding was assessed.

Results: The most frequent site of involvement was rectosigmoid and sigmoid colon (31.6%). The majority of the cases were moderately differentiated (75%) in morphology, and showed tumor invasion into the pericolic/subserosal fat (66.6%), and were stage III (38.3%). Nodal involvement was present in 50% cases. Correlations between tumor budding and nodal involvement (-value 0.039) and AJCC stage (-value 0.021) were found to be statistically significant.

Conclusion: Tumor budding may be a promising and powerful predictor of lymphnodal metastasis and a higher stage of tumor and can be used as a marker for assessing the aggressiveness of CRC. Routine hemotoxylin-eosin staining supported by cytokeratin immunostain can aid in the grading of tumor budding in CRC.

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