throbber
D i a g n o s i n g c o l o r e c t a l c a n c e r
`
`Diagnosing Colorectal Carcinoma: Clinical
`and Molecular Approaches
`
`J. Milburn Jessup, MD
`Herman R. Menck, MBA
`A. Fremgen, PhD
`D.P. Winchester, MD
`
`Introduction
`Colorectal carcinoma is the fourth most
`prevalent carcinoma and second most
`frequent cause of death from cancer in
`the United States, with an estimated
`131,200 new cases and 54,900 deaths in
`1997.1 Although the death rate from large
`bowel cancer may be decreasing slightly,
`it still remains a health risk that consumes
`national resources and creates consider-
`able personal suffering. Dietary modifica-
`tion may decrease the neoplastic trans-
`formation potential of bowel mucosa,2
`but the widespread adoption of low fat,
`high fiber diets will not eliminate totally
`the risk of large bowel cancer. The con-
`sumption of aspirin3,4 or other nons-
`teroidal anti-inflammatory drugs5 may also
`reduce the risk of developing the adeno-
`matous polyps that precede large bowel
`cancers. However, not all patients benefit
`
`Dr. Jessup is an Associate Professor of Surgery in the
`Department of Surgery at New England Deaconess
`Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston,
`Massachusetts.
`Mr. Menck is the Manager of Clinical Information
`Systems for the Commission on Cancer of the
`American College of Surgeons in Chicago, Illinois.
`Dr. Fremgen is the Associate Manager of Clinical
`Information Systems for the Commission on Cancer of
`the American College of Surgeons in Chicago, Illinois.
`Dr. Winchester is Professor of Surgery at Northwestern
`University Medical School, Director of the Cancer
`Department at the American College of Surgeons in
`Chicago, and Chief of Surgery at Evanston Hospital in
`Evanston, Illinois.
`This work funded in part by grant PO1 CA44704 from
`the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of
`Health, Bethesda, MD, and grant CCG #252E from
`the American Cancer Society, Atlanta, Georgia.
`
`from these chemoprevention strategies
`and some may have deleterious side ef-
`fects. Recently, fecal occult blood testing
`(FOBT) and large bowel endoscopy have
`been found to detect cancers at an earlier
`stage and decrease the formation of col-
`orectal carcinomas. Also, the recent iden-
`tification of specific genetic mutations
`that cause two different types of inherited
`colorectal carcinoma suggests that in the
`near future early diagnosis will be possi-
`ble through blood or stool tests. As a re-
`sult, considerable enthusiasm now exists
`that both the rate of earlier diagnosis and
`the outcome of colorectal carcinoma will
`be improved.
`This review first assesses the com-
`mon patterns of presentation of col-
`orectal carcinoma, then summarizes the
`current status of clinical diagnostic
`methodology, and finally outlines the fu-
`ture potential of molecular diagnostic
`tests. Critical to the successful application
`of molecular diagnostic tests is an appro-
`priate understanding of the clinical back-
`ground within which the tests will be
`used. Initially, this review focuses on the
`clinical presentation of colorectal carci-
`noma, then considers the genetic and bio-
`logic causes of colorectal carcinoma. Any
`molecular approach to diagnosis must ex-
`plain the range of clinical and pathologic
`features involved in the manifestations of
`the disease at presentation. Currently,
`more patients are diagnosed because they
`develop signs or symptoms of colorectal
`cancer than are identified in an asympto-
`matic state. A major goal is to increase
`the proportion of patients who are diag-
`
`70
`
`Ca—A cancer Journal for Clinicians
`
`Geneoscopy Exhibit 1057, Page 1
`
`

`

`C A C a n c e r J C l i n 1 9 9 7 ; 4 7 : 7 0 - 9 2
`
`Table 1
`Conditions Associated with Colorectal Carcinoma
`
`Clinical
`Rectal bleeding (occult or clinical)
`Abdominal, pelvic, or back pain
`Obstruction or perforation
`Inflammatory bowel disease
`Pelvic radiation
`
`Genetic
`History of colorectal carcinoma
`History of adenomatous polyps
`History of two or more first-degree relatives with bowel cancer
`Familial adenomatous polyposis, hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer,
`or variant syndromes
`History of breast, ovarian, or endometrial carcinoma
`
`nosed while they are asymptomatic be-
`cause these patients present at an earlier
`stage that is more amenable to cure.6
`
`Common Patterns of Clinical
`Diagnosis
`The clinical and genetic conditions associ-
`ated with the development of colorectal
`carcinoma (Table 1) represent the situa-
`tions in which the clinician should consid-
`er the diagnosis of colorectal carcinoma.
`Although it is difficult to identify the frac-
`tion of patients who are symptomatic at
`diagnosis, analysis of a large number of
`patients who are diagnosed in hospitals
`across the country is informative because
`it demonstrates the distribution of stage
`at diagnosis. The National Cancer Data
`Base (NCDB), a national cancer manage-
`ment and outcomes data base that is a
`joint effort of the American Cancer Soci-
`ety and the American College of Sur-
`geons,7 currently captures more than 50
`percent of the estimated new cases of
`cancer in the United States and is an ex-
`
`cellent starting point for an analysis of the
`patterns of care and outcome for patients
`with cancer. Data on the interaction of
`age, ethnicity, site of primary carcinoma,
`and stage at presentation are presented in
`Table 2. As reported earlier in a study of
`colon cancer,8 patients over the age of 70
`years are more likely to present with
`stage I or II disease than are younger pa-
`tients. This trend is also present in rectal
`cancer, in which 62 percent of patients
`over 80 years of age have stage I or II dis-
`ease compared with 50 percent for those
`patients who are less than 50 years old
`and 53 percent for those who are between
`50 and 60 years old (Table 2). Ethnicity
`is another significant factor because
`African Americans are less likely to pre-
`sent with stage I or II colon or rectal can-
`cer than are non-Hispanic whites (Table
`2). Hispanics are also slightly less likely to
`be diagnosed with stage I or II colorectal
`carcinoma than are non-Hispanic whites
`(Table 2). However, Asians have a pat-
`tern of stage at diagnosis similar to that of
`non-Hispanic whites (data not shown),
`
`Vol. 47 No. 2 March/april 1997
`
`71
`
` 15424863, 1997, 2, Downloaded from https://acsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3322/canjclin.47.2.70, Wiley Online Library on [29/12/2023]. See the Terms and Conditions (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/terms-and-conditions) on Wiley Online Library for rules of use; OA articles are governed by the applicable Creative Commons License
`
`Geneoscopy Exhibit 1057, Page 2
`
`

`

`D i a g n o s i n g c o l o r e c t a l c a n c e r
`
`Table 2
`Distribution of Adenocarcinoma of the Colon and Rectum
`by AJCC Stage, Age at Diagnosis, and Ethnicity of Patients
`Diagnosed in 1993 at Hospitals
`Participating in the National Cancer Data Base
`
`Site and Category
`
`I-II
`
`% Distribution by Stage
`III
`
`Age
`
`Colon
`< 50
`50–59
`60–69
`70–79
`≥80
`Subtotal
`
`Rectum
`< 50
`50–59
`60–69
`70–79
`≥80
`Subtotal
`
`Ethnicity
`
`Colon
`Non-Hispanic white
`Hispanic
`African American
`
`Subtotal
`
`Rectum
`Non-Hispanic white
`Hispanic
`African American
`
`Subtotal
`
`44
`47
`53
`57
`59
`
`50
`53
`58
`59
`62
`
`55
`51
`48
`
`58
`53
`54
`
`27
`27
`26
`25
`25
`
`33
`30
`27
`26
`22
`
`25
`29
`27
`
`27
`27
`25
`
`IV
`
`29
`26
`21
`19
`16
`
`17
`17
`15
`15
`16
`
`20
`20
`25
`
`15
`20
`21
`
`Total %
`
`Number of
`Cases
`
`100
`100
`100
`100
`100
`
`100
`100
`100
`100
`100
`
`100
`100
`100
`
`100
`100
`100
`
`2,503
`4,130
`9,112
`12,871
`8,661
`
`37,277
`
`1,338
`2,406
`4,273
`4,579
`2,238
`
`14,834
`
`32,463
`680
`3,087
`
`36,230
`
`11,731
`372
`950
`
`13,053
`
`AJCC = American Joint Committee on Cancer.
`
`72
`
`Ca—A cancer Journal for Clinicians
`
` 15424863, 1997, 2, Downloaded from https://acsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3322/canjclin.47.2.70, Wiley Online Library on [29/12/2023]. See the Terms and Conditions (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/terms-and-conditions) on Wiley Online Library for rules of use; OA articles are governed by the applicable Creative Commons License
`
`Geneoscopy Exhibit 1057, Page 3
`
`

`

`C A C a n c e r J C l i n 1 9 9 7 ; 4 7 : 7 0 - 9 2
`
`and the sample of Native Americans is
`too small to draw any conclusions about
`their stage at presentation. The data in
`the NCDB do not reveal any significant
`effects of median income, region of the
`country, or type of hospital on the stage
`of disease at diagnosis (data not shown).
`As a result, these data from the NCDB
`suggest that age and ethnicity are impor-
`tant factors to consider in the diagnosis of
`colorectal carcinoma.
`IMPORTANCE OF AGE
`Age has two contrasting effects on the
`diagnosis of colorectal carcinoma.
`Young (less than 40 years old) patients
`have a worse outcome than middle-aged
`patients, whereas older (more than 70
`years old) patients present with earlier
`stage of disease. Bacon9 first reported
`that colorectal carcinoma is diagnosed
`before age 40 in 2 to 6 percent of all col-
`orectal carcinoma patients. The delay in
`attributing symptoms to a possible col-
`orectal cancer may contribute to the
`worse outcome.10,11 Although several
`series indicate that there is a worse out-
`look for patients who develop colorectal
`carcinoma before the age of 40,12-17 two
`series18,19 suggest that younger patients
`have the same survival as older patients,
`possibly because the distribution of pa-
`tients with stage III and IV disease was
`similar to that of the older patients in
`their series.
`The outcome of younger patients
`may be worse because they present with
`more advanced disease or disease with a
`poorer histologic grade of differentiation.
`Several authors10,12-16 have found that
`younger patients present with more nodal
`or visceral metastases than do older pa-
`tients, as is the case with the current data
`from the NCDB (Table 2). However, the
`data of others13,14,17,20 suggest that the out-
`come of younger patients is worse than
`that of older patients, even when matched
`by stage.
`The frequency of more advanced
`disease in younger patients may result
`
`from longer delays in diagnosis compared
`with older patients; however, the fre-
`quency of rectal bleeding or abdominal
`pain in these young patients is similar to
`that in older patients. Further, Adkins et
`al16 observed that eight of the 45 patients
`were found incidentally during evaluation
`for other problems, which suggests that
`the potential delay in detecting a cancer
`from the onset of symptoms was less than
`three months. Similarly, in other stud-
`ies18,20 there was no significant difference
`in symptom duration between young and
`old patients. In summary, there is a con-
`sensus that the disease presents at a more
`advanced state
`in younger patients.
`Therefore, patients who develop colorec-
`tal cancer before age 40 in the absence of
`a defined genetic syndrome, such as famil-
`ial adenomatous polyposis or hereditary
`nonpolyposis colonic cancer, may still
`have an accelerated rate of mutations that
`may provide clues to the analysis of the
`genetic mechanisms that cause sporadic
`colorectal carcinoma.
`Older patients with colorectal cancer
`are defined as older than 75 or 80 years at
`the time of diagnosis. Comorbid disease
`and type of presentation may produce a
`worse outcome. The series of Payne et
`al,21 Wise et al,22 and Hobler23 suggest that
`sepsis and complications of surgery may
`occur more frequently in the elderly pop-
`ulation. However, Arnaud et al24 showed
`that the postoperative five-year survival
`rate of older patients was similar to that
`of younger patients. In addition, the
`three-year23 and five-year21 cancer-specif-
`ic survivals of patients over the age of 75
`were the same as that of younger pa-
`tients. Interestingly, several authors sug-
`gested that more right-sided cancers arise
`in the elderly than in the slightly younger
`population.18,21 The elderly seem to have
`a slightly increased frequency of emer-
`gency operations, since 7.4 percent of old-
`er patients required emergency surgery,
`compared with four percent for patients
`younger than 75 years.21 Thus, the biolog-
`ic behavior of cancers is not likely to be
`
`Vol. 47 No. 2 March/april 1997
`
`73
`
` 15424863, 1997, 2, Downloaded from https://acsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3322/canjclin.47.2.70, Wiley Online Library on [29/12/2023]. See the Terms and Conditions (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/terms-and-conditions) on Wiley Online Library for rules of use; OA articles are governed by the applicable Creative Commons License
`
`Geneoscopy Exhibit 1057, Page 4
`
`

`

`D i a g n o s i n g c o l o r e c t a l c a n c e r
`
`more aggressive in older patients than in
`patients between 40 and 70 years old.
`
`ETHNICITY AS A DIAGNOSTIC FACTOR
`Ethnicity may be associated with an in-
`creased frequency of advanced cancer at
`diagnosis in African Americans. Thomas
`et al25 suggest that inner-city blacks are
`diagnosed with colorectal carcinoma at
`an earlier age than white patients, and
`that this trend is significantly greater in
`black males than in white males. Boring
`et al26 have reported that there has been
`a significant increase in cancer-specific
`death rates in both black men and
`women for colorectal cancer compared
`with white men and women over the last
`30 years. In fact, the cancer-specific
`death rate declined in white men and
`women, whereas it increased in black
`men and women by 47 and 16 percent,
`respectively.26 Interestingly, when inci-
`dence rates are stratified by educational
`level and socioeconomic status, the inci-
`dence of cancer of the colon and rectum
`is higher for whites than for blacks for
`each stratification.26 As in the current
`NCDB data, Boring et al26 observed a
`trend in which the frequency of localized
`cancer at diagnosis is lower in blacks (30
`percent) than in whites (36 percent).
`Thus, the poorer outcome may be attrib-
`utable to more limited access to care.
`Weaver et al,27 reporting their experi-
`ence over a 10-year period at Meharry
`Medical College, found that their black
`patients tended to present with more ad-
`vanced disease than did those observed
`by Boring et al.26 Their experience may
`also reflect limited access to health care
`systems. A major challenge for improv-
`ing early diagnosis is to increase the pro-
`portion of stage I and II colorectal can-
`cers diagnosed in African Americans.
`
`PRESENTING SYMPTOMS AND SIGNS
`The symptoms and signs of carcinoma of
`the colon and rectum are rectal bleeding
`
`(either gross blood in the stool or a gua-
`iac-positive reaction on digital rectal ex-
`amination), abdominal pain, change in
`bowel habits, nausea, vomiting, abdomi-
`nal distention, weight loss, fatigue, and
`anemia. Rectal bleeding may be associ-
`ated with an improved outcome, possi-
`bly because it prompts earlier diagnosis.
`Various authors28-31 have observed that
`rectal bleeding as a presenting symptom
`was associated with a better overall sur-
`vival in univariate analyses, but when
`rectal bleeding was analyzed in multi-
`variate analysis in which it was corrected
`for stage and site, it either had no ef-
`fect29,31 or became less important as an
`independent prognostic variable.28 Simi-
`larly, Wiggers et al32 found that only 19
`percent of patients who presented with
`rectal bleeding died of disease compared
`with 33 percent of patients who did not
`present with rectal bleeding (P=0.017).
`Cappell and Goldberg33 observed that
`rectal bleeding was 2.8 times more
`prevalent at the time of diagnosis in ear-
`ly stage I lesions than in stage IV can-
`cers. Also, Graffner and Olsson34 report-
`ed that rectal bleeding was more
`frequently associated with rectal (50 per-
`cent) than colon (14 percent) cancer.
`Thus, rectal bleeding may be associated
`with early stage lesions (perhaps be-
`cause early lesions are more vascular-
`ized than more advanced lesions) and, as
`a result, may carry a better prognosis.
`Thus, blood on the stool on digital rectal
`examination, on guaiac test, or by history
`must be further evaluated and not dis-
`missed as caused by hemorrhoids.
`Abdominal pain is another symptom
`that may lead to the diagnosis of large
`bowel cancer. Two types of abdominal pain
`are caused by cancer of the colon or rec-
`tum. The first is cramping or colicky pain
`associated with complete or partial bowel
`obstruction. Although uncommon in rec-
`tal cancer, it may be a presenting symptom
`in colonic cancer. This symptom may be
`best considered as representing the clini-
`cal syndromes of obstruction or perfora-
`
`74
`
`Ca—A cancer Journal for Clinicians
`
` 15424863, 1997, 2, Downloaded from https://acsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3322/canjclin.47.2.70, Wiley Online Library on [29/12/2023]. See the Terms and Conditions (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/terms-and-conditions) on Wiley Online Library for rules of use; OA articles are governed by the applicable Creative Commons License
`
`Geneoscopy Exhibit 1057, Page 5
`
`

`

`C A C a n c e r J C l i n 1 9 9 7 ; 4 7 : 7 0 - 9 2
`
`tion that are discussed later. Wiggers et
`al32 identified abdominal pain and change
`in bowel habits as significant covariates in
`their multivariate analysis of patients with
`colorectal carcinomas.
`Either pelvic pain or tenesmus may
`be a symptom of a locally advanced rectal
`cancer and may be caused by involve-
`ment of peripheral nerves.35 Such a local-
`ly advanced rectal cancer may be suc-
`cessfully treated with a multimodality
`approach. However, pain is more likely
`to be associated with a stage III than a
`stage I lesion and, as a result, may have a
`worse prognosis. Other complaints, such
`as nausea, vomiting, anorexia, and weight
`loss of more than 5 kg, are uncommon at
`presentation but are more likely to be as-
`sociated with advanced than early stage
`cancers.33
`Finally, hemorrhoids at presentation
`may not be associated with survival but
`may be associated with early stage can-
`cers of the colon.33 These data reinforce
`the need to evaluate the entire colon
`when a patient presents with rectal bleed-
`ing and hemorrhoids.
`Anemia secondary to microscopic
`bleeding (e.g., iron deficiency anemia),
`especially from a right-sided colonic can-
`cer, may be a bad prognostic factor, par-
`ticularly when it is associated with fatigue
`and weight loss because it is associated
`with a fivefold increased risk of metastat-
`ic disease.33
`In summary, rectal bleeding may be
`associated with early stage disease and
`better survival. Complete or partial bow-
`el obstruction often adversely affects out-
`come. Constitutional signs and symp-
`toms–such as general malaise, weight
`loss, and profound anemia–are often as-
`sociated with advanced disease and re-
`flect the poor outcome of patients who
`present with visceral metastases.
`
`OBSTRUCTION AND PERFORATION
`The definitions of both obstruction and
`perforation are either imprecise or not
`
`stated. Much of the literature either as-
`sumes that the reader knows what an ob-
`struction is or does not indicate whether
`obstruction is complete (i.e., total ab-
`sence of flatus or bowel movements for at
`least a day) or partial. Similarly, the type
`of perforation (e.g, free into the peritoneal
`cavity or contained, occurring through the
`cancer or proximal to a complete obstruc-
`tion) is often not well described. The inci-
`dence of complete obstruction appears to
`range between two and 16 percent of new-
`ly diagnosed cases of colorectal can-
`cer.20,26,36 The location of the primary can-
`cer may affect the probability of developing
`a complete obstruction. Levien et al37
`found that carcinomas of the splenic flex-
`ure were more likely to obstruct than were
`carcinomas at other sites. In contrast, ob-
`struction from rectal cancers appears to be
`uncommon.38 Fielding et al39 suggest that
`the proportion of patients with obstruction
`follows the incidence of cancer at each site,
`whereas other reports suggest that the left
`colon36 or the ascending colon38 is the most
`frequent site of obstruction.
`The importance of bowel obstruction
`is supported by its function as an indepen-
`dent covariate in a multivariate analysis of
`outcome, even with stage included in the
`analysis. Crucitti et al40 studied 361 pa-
`tients with colonic or rectal cancer and
`found that the presence of obstruction
`was a significant predictor of death from
`cancer even when stage was included in
`the analysis (obstructed patients had a 31
`percent five-year survival compared with
`a 72 percent survival for patients who
`were not obstructed). Similar findings
`have been reported by others.29,36,41,42
`Wolmark et al42 suggested that the devel-
`opment of obstruction added to the poorer
`prognosis of right-sided colonic cancer,
`but there was no difference in outcome
`between right-sided and left-sided colonic
`cancers in the Gastrointestinal Tumor
`Study Group colonic adjuvant therapy tri-
`als, although in that study the presence of
`obstruction increased the risk of death
`from cancer 1.4-fold. Perforation occurs
`
`Vol. 47 No. 2 March/april 1997
`
`75
`
` 15424863, 1997, 2, Downloaded from https://acsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3322/canjclin.47.2.70, Wiley Online Library on [29/12/2023]. See the Terms and Conditions (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/terms-and-conditions) on Wiley Online Library for rules of use; OA articles are governed by the applicable Creative Commons License
`
`Geneoscopy Exhibit 1057, Page 6
`
`

`

`D i a g n o s i n g c o l o r e c t a l c a n c e r
`
`less commonly. Approximately three-
`quarters of patients operated upon emer-
`gently had obstructions, whereas one-
`quarter had perforations.43 Among the
`patients with perforations, only one-quar-
`ter of perforations were in the prestenotic
`bowel or the dilated cecum; most were
`through the tumor. Of the perforations,
`half were free perforations into the ab-
`dominal cavity, and the remainder were
`perforations into either an abscess cavity
`or a phlegmon. Interestingly, five percent
`of patients had perforations on more than
`one occasion. Perforation appears to be
`associated with local recurrence of dis-
`ease, most likely because malignant cells
`are dispersed throughout the area of in-
`fection.28,41 Perforation increases the risk
`of death from cancer 3.4-fold.28 These dif-
`ferent patterns of presentation change the
`distribution of pain and must be taken
`into account by the clinician.
`
`ROLE OF INFLAMMATORY BOWEL
`DISEASE
`Inflammatory bowel disease is a prema-
`lignant lesion that causes a predisposition
`to colorectal carcinoma when the disease
`enters a chronic, active phase.44 The
`propensity with which carcinoma devel-
`ops may be associated with the degree of
`dysplasia caused by the inflammatory pro-
`cess.45-47 Although chronic ulcerative coli-
`tis has long been associated with an in-
`creased risk for the development of
`invasive carcinoma, recent studies have
`shown that chronic Crohn’s disease is also
`associated with the subsequent develop-
`ment of cancer.48 As a result, among the
`symptomatic patients it is important to
`remember that inflammatory bowel dis-
`ease may lead to bowel cancer. The cu-
`mulative incidence of colorectal cancer in
`inflammatory bowel disease is estimated
`to be five to 10 percent at 20 years and 12
`to 20 percent at 30 years.48 This reinforces
`the need for surveillance in patients with
`inflammatory bowel disease to ensure
`early diagnosis.
`
`Current Status of Diagnosis in the
`Asymptomatic Patient
`BIOLOGY OF FAMILIAL AND SPORADIC
`COLORECTAL CARCINOMA
`The pioneering work of Muto, Bussey,
`and Morson49 revealed that the majority
`of colorectal carcinomas develop from an
`adenomatous polyp. This polyp-to-carci-
`noma sequence is based on several de-
`scriptive but supportive findings: adeno-
`matous polyps have a distribution of
`location similar to that of cancers that
`arise in the large bowel49,50 but appear an
`average of five years earlier than does
`large bowel cancer,49,51 many large bowel
`cancers display remnants of the polyp ad-
`jacent to the primary cancer, serial biopsy
`of polyps that have not been resected re-
`veals a slow process of transformation to
`an invasive cancer,49,52 endoscopic re-
`moval of adenomatous polyps decreases
`the risk of developing bowel cancer by 76
`to 90 percent,6 and natural history studies
`of small polyps left in the colon reveal that
`some polyps less than 0.5 cm in diameter
`may regress whereas others either remain
`unchanged or slowly progress to a larger
`more dysplastic phenotype.53 Cannon-Al-
`bright et al54 have estimated that 19 per-
`cent of the general population forms ade-
`nomatous polyps and, therefore, is at risk
`to develop colorectal carcinoma.
`Three recent findings have markedly
`advanced our understanding of the rela-
`tionship between the formation of adeno-
`matous polyps and invasive carcinomas.
`First, the lesion that precedes the devel-
`opment of a polyp is an aberrant crypt fo-
`cus (ACF) that becomes a microadeno-
`ma. The ACF begins as an outpouching
`of an epithelium-lined sac from the side
`of the crypt of Lieberkuhn that expands
`and eventually develops into a separate
`broad-mouthed crypt.55 Microadenomas
`are identified by methylene blue dye
`staining at colonoscopy or in the patholo-
`gy specimen because their crypt openings
`to the lumen of the bowel are several
`
`76
`
`Ca—A cancer Journal for Clinicians
`
` 15424863, 1997, 2, Downloaded from https://acsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3322/canjclin.47.2.70, Wiley Online Library on [29/12/2023]. See the Terms and Conditions (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/terms-and-conditions) on Wiley Online Library for rules of use; OA articles are governed by the applicable Creative Commons License
`
`Geneoscopy Exhibit 1057, Page 7
`
`

`

`C A C a n c e r J C l i n 1 9 9 7 ; 4 7 : 7 0 - 9 2
`
`times larger than the normal crypt open-
`ing.56 Roncucci56 has reported that mi-
`croadenomas may be dysplastic, whereas
`others57,58 have shown that loss of tumor
`suppressor genes and activation of proto-
`oncogenes may occur with frequencies
`similar to these events in polypoid adeno-
`mas. ACF and microadenomas are impor-
`tant because these lesions develop into
`adenomas and carcinomas in animal mod-
`els of carcinogenesis.59 However, the evi-
`dence that ACFs develop into adenoma-
`tous polyps is circumstantial: patients with
`familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP)
`have more ACFs than do patients with
`sporadic colorectal carcinomas, who have
`more ACFs than do controls without can-
`cer.60 Thus, ACF may be an important in-
`termediate marker to aid in the diagnosis
`of patients with colorectal cancer.
`The second finding is that not all
`adenomas are exophytic; they may be flat
`and difficult to detect on colonoscopy.
`The Japanese have focused on the flat
`adenoma61-64 as a precursor lesion to car-
`cinoma; many flat adenomas are ulcerat-
`ed lesions that may be more aggressive
`than exophytic cancers.65 These lesions
`have also been appreciated in European
`patients.66 Further, flat adenomas may be
`precursors to the cancers that develop in
`hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal can-
`cer (HNPCC) because they display the
`microsatellite instability that is observed
`in HNPCC and have a proximal large
`bowel distribution.64 Lynch and his asso-
`ciates have identified several kindreds of
`patients who display the hereditary flat
`adenoma syndrome (HFAS) in which
`colon cancers develop at a later age than
`in FAP patients, have a proximal colon
`distribution, and arise in association with
`flat adenomas.67 However, genetic link-
`age studies suggest that these kindreds
`are linked to deletions on chromosome
`5q and may be variants of FAP rather
`than altered presentations of HNPCC,
`which has prompted the use of the term
`attenuated familial adenomatous polypo-
`sis (AFAP) for this syndrome.68
`
`The third observation is that a frac-
`tion of bowel cancers appear to arise
`without an antecedent polyp. Several re-
`ports have suggested that adenocarcino-
`mas of the bowel may arise without poly-
`poid remnants or altered adjacent
`mucosa.69,70 Bedenne et al71 demonstrat-
`ed that ulcerated, infiltrating cancers in
`the right colon were least likely to be as-
`sociated with an adenomatous polyp.
`These and other results suggested to
`Jass72 that 10 to 30 percent of colorectal
`cancers may not develop from an an-
`tecedent adenomatous polyp but arise de
`novo from mucosa that appears other-
`wise normal or has microadenomas. This
`is important because the current technol-
`ogy for diagnosis in asymptomatic indi-
`viduals requires that a polyp be removed
`in order to prevent bowel cancer. As a re-
`sult, under the present screening guide-
`lines somewhere between 70 and 90 per-
`cent of large bowel cancers may be
`identified and removed before they be-
`come frankly invasive. However, under
`the best of circumstances 10 to 30 percent
`of large bowel cancers may not develop
`from a benign polyp and, as a result, may
`not be detectable or treatable until the le-
`sion is frankly invasive.
`
`MOLECULAR PATHWAYS FOR SPORADIC
`AND INHERITED COLORECTAL
`CARCINOMAS: IMPORTANCE FOR
`DIAGNOSIS
`Current evidence indicates that colorec-
`tal carcinoma develops through as many
`as three related but slightly different mol-
`ecular pathways. The first and best de-
`scribed molecular pathway involves mu-
`tation in a gene called the adenomatous
`polyposis coli (APC) gene. This mutation
`causes the appearance of hundreds to
`thousands of adenomatous polyps in the
`large bowel and is the cause of the auto-
`somally dominantly inherited FAP and
`related syndromes.73 The molecular alter-
`ations that occur in this pathway largely
`involve deletions of alleles of tumor sup-
`
`Vol. 47 No. 2 March/april 1997
`
`77
`
` 15424863, 1997, 2, Downloaded from https://acsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3322/canjclin.47.2.70, Wiley Online Library on [29/12/2023]. See the Terms and Conditions (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/terms-and-conditions) on Wiley Online Library for rules of use; OA articles are governed by the applicable Creative Commons License
`
`Geneoscopy Exhibit 1057, Page 8
`
`

`

`D i a g n o s i n g c o l o r e c t a l c a n c e r
`
`Activation c-Ki-ras
`Activation c-src
`
`Proliferation
`LOH APC
`LOH MCC
`
`LOH P53
`LOH DCC
`
`Normal
`Mucosa
`
`l
`
`ll
`
`lll
`
`Carcinoma
`
`Metastasis
`
`Adenomas
`
`Fig. 1. Genetic alterations in the familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) type of neoplastic transfor-
`mation of bowel epitheilum. Activation generally implies a mutational event, although it may merely
`be an increase in the expression of a normal gene product or the dephosphorylation of a peptide
`such as c-src. APC = adenomatous polyposis coli gene; DCC = deleted in colorectal cancer
`gene; LOH = loss of heterozygosity. (Reproduced with permission from Jessup et al.76)
`
`Mutation
`hMSH2, hMLH1
`hPMS1, hPMS2
`
`Activation c-Ki-ras
`
`Proliferation ?
`Mutation APC
`
`Mutation P53
`
`Normal
`Mucosa
`
`l
`
`ll
`
`lll
`
`Carcinoma
`
`Metastasis
`
`Adenomas
`
`Fig. 2. Genetic alterations in the hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal carcinoma (HNPCC) type of
`neoplastic transformation of bowel epithelium. Unlike the events in Fig. 1, mutation without loss of
`heterozygosity occurs in the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene, p53, and c-Ki-rasin this
`pathway. The passage through the various classes of adenomas may be shortened.(Reproduced
`with permission from Jessup et al.76)
`
`pressor genes, that is, loss of heterozygos-
`ity (LOH) in APC, p53, and the deleted
`in colorectal cancer (DCC) gene74 com-
`bined with mutational activation of pro-
`to-oncogenes, especially c-Ki-ras (Fig. 1;
`see also reviews in the literature75,76 ). In
`
`contrast, mutation of the human homo-
`logues of the bacterial mutHLS complex
`(hMSH2, hMLH1, hPMS1, and hPMS2)
`produces the DNA mismatch repair
`defects that appear to be the cause of
`HNPCC.77-82 The mutations in DNA mis-
`
`78
`
`Ca—A cancer Journal for Clinicians
`
` 15424863, 1997, 2, Downloaded from https://acsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3322/canjclin.47.2.70, Wiley Online Library on [29/12/2023]. See the Terms and Conditions (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/terms-and-conditions) on Wiley Online Library for rules of use; OA articles are governed by the applicable Creative Commons License
`
`Geneoscopy Exhibit 1057, Page 9
`
`

`

`C A C a n c e r J C l i n 1 9 9 7 ; 4 7 : 7 0 - 9 2
`
`match repair enzymes lead to genetic in-
`stability that is reflected in errors in accu-
`rate replication of the repetitive di-, tri-,
`and tetranucleotide repeats that are scat-
`tered throughout the genome.83-86 As a re-
`sult, the genomic instability identified in
`HNPCC is commonly referred to as ei-
`ther replication error positive (RER+) or,
`because microsatellite regions in the
`genome contain the nucleotide repeats,
`as microsatellite instability (MIN). Al-
`though these replication errors produce
`mutations in many of the same tumor
`suppressor genes and proto-oncogenes
`that are affected in the FAP pathway,
`there is a significantly lower frequency of
`LOH in the HNPCC pathway85 (Fig. 2).
`Finally, although many sporadic car-
`cinomas appear to follow either the FAP
`(with mutation and LOH of APC, p53,
`and DCC) or the HNPCC (with RER+
`phenotype and mutation of APC, p53,
`and DCC without LOH) pathway, col-
`orectal carcinomas that arise de novo
`seem to have a slightly different pattern
`of molec

This document is available on Docket Alarm but you must sign up to view it.


Or .

Accessing this document will incur an additional charge of $.

After purchase, you can access this document again without charge.

Accept $ Charge
throbber

Still Working On It

This document is taking longer than usual to download. This can happen if we need to contact the court directly to obtain the document and their servers are running slowly.

Give it another minute or two to complete, and then try the refresh button.

throbber

A few More Minutes ... Still Working

It can take up to 5 minutes for us to download a document if the court servers are running slowly.

Thank you for your continued patience.

This document could not be displayed.

We could not find this document within its docket. Please go back to the docket page and check the link. If that does not work, go back to the docket and refresh it to pull the newest information.

Your account does not support viewing this document.

You need a Paid Account to view this document. Click here to change your account type.

Your account does not support viewing this document.

Set your membership status to view this document.

With a Docket Alarm membership, you'll get a whole lot more, including:

  • Up-to-date information for this case.
  • Email alerts whenever there is an update.
  • Full text search for other cases.
  • Get email alerts whenever a new case matches your search.

Become a Member

One Moment Please

The filing “” is large (MB) and is being downloaded.

Please refresh this page in a few minutes to see if the filing has been downloaded. The filing will also be emailed to you when the download completes.

Your document is on its way!

If you do not receive the document in five minutes, contact support at support@docketalarm.com.

Sealed Document

We are unable to display this document, it may be under a court ordered seal.

If you have proper credentials to access the file, you may proceed directly to the court's system using your government issued username and password.


Access Government Site

We are redirecting you
to a mobile optimized page.





Document Unreadable or Corrupt

Refresh this Document
Go to the Docket

We are unable to display this document.

Refresh this Document
Go to the Docket