Abstract

Determining whether a tumor exhibits microsatellite instability (MSI) is useful in identifying patients with hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer and sporadic gastrointestinal cancers with defective DNA mismatch repair (MMR). The assessment of MSI status aids in establishing a clinical prognosis and may be predictive of tumor response to chemotherapy. A reference panel of five markers was suggested for MSI analysis by a National Cancer Institute (NCI) workshop in 1997 that has helped to standardize testing. But this panel of markers has limitations resulting from the inclusion of dinucleotide markers, which are less sensitive and specific for detection of tumors with MMR deficiencies compared to other types of markers that are currently available. This study demonstrates that mononucleotides are the most sensitive and specific markers for detection of tumors with defects in MMR and identifies an optimal panel of markers for detection of MSI-H tumors. A set of 266 mono-, di-, tetra- and penta-nucleotide repeat microsatellite markers were used to screen for MSI in colorectal tumors. The best markers for detection of MSI-H tumors were selected for a MSI Multiplex System, which included five mononucleotide markers: BAT-25, BAT-26, NR-21, NR-24 and MONO-27. In addition, two pentanucleotide markers were added to identify sample mix-ups and/or contamination. We classified 153 colorectal tumors using the new MSI Multiplex System and compared the results to those obtained with a panel of 10 microsatellite markers combined with immunohistochemical (IHC) analysis. We observed 99% concordance between the two methods with nearly 100% accuracy in detection of MSI-H tumors. Approximately 5% of the MSI-H tumors had normal levels of four MMR proteins and as a result would have been misclassified based solely on IHC analysis, emphasizing the importance of performing MSI testing. The new MSI Multiplex System offers several distinct advantages over other methods of MSI testing in that it is both extremely sensitive and specific and amenable to high-throughput analysis. The MSI Multiplex System meets the new recommendations proposed at the recent 2002 NCI workshop on HNPCC and MSI testing and overcomes problems inherent to the original five-marker panel. The use of a single multiplex fluorescent MSI assay reduces the time and costs involved in MSI testing with increased reliability and accuracy and thus should facilitate widespread screening for microsatellite instability in tumors of patients with gastrointestinal cancers.

Highlights

  • The majority of tumors from patients with hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC known as Lynch syndrome) and approximately 15% of sporadic colorectal tumors exhibit microsatellite instabil-ity (MSI), which is characterized by alterations in the length of short tandem repeats in tumor DNA [1,16,44]

  • The ranking for specificity was different, with mononucleotide markers showing an average of 99% specificity, followed by pentanucleotide markers at slightly less than 99%, tetranucleotides at 97% and dinucleotides at 94% specificity

  • Markers exhibiting the lowest specificity for microsatellite instability (MSI)-H tumors were mononucleotide BAT-40, dinucleotide markers D2S123 and D17S250 and tetranucleotide marker MYCL1

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Summary

Introduction

The majority of tumors from patients with hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC known as Lynch syndrome) and approximately 15% of sporadic colorectal tumors exhibit microsatellite instabil-ity (MSI), which is characterized by alterations in the length of short tandem repeats in tumor DNA [1,16,44]. Microsatellite instability is caused by DNA mismatch repair (MMR) deficiency and subsequent failure to repair errors introduced during replication of DNA [6,11, 22]. Repetitive DNA sequences like microsatellites are especially prone to errors during DNA replication. The analysis of their stability combined with the analysis of DNA MMR proteins’ levels by immunohistochemistry (IHC) provides a sensitive and specific method for identifying tumors with defective DNA mismatch re-. The MSI status of a tumor is predictive of clinical outcome and may be predictive of tumor response to adjuvant therapies [9,13,28,29,30,35,37,39,47,49]

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