Abstract

180 Background: Medullary carcinoma (MC) of the colon was described first in 1999 and is characterized by undifferentiated sheets of epithelial cells in a solid growth pattern with pushing borders and prominent lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates. It frequently shows microsatellite instability (MSI). However, the clinicopathological and survival outcomes between MC and the more common adenocarcinoma of the colon (AC) are not well defined in a large database. Therefore, we used a large national registry to explore the association of survival characteristics with sociodemographic, geographic, and disease variables in this cohort of patients. Methods: We sampled the National Cancer Database (NCDB) for colon cancer patients diagnosed with MC from 2004-2018. Multivariate cox regression models were used to compare hazard ratios for demographic, geographic, and disease characteristics. In addition, Kaplan-Meier survival plots were utilized to assess survival rate differences between MC and AC tumors located in the ascending, transverse, or descending colon. A p-value<0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results: Only 2,709 (0.29%) of the 922,667 patients with AC had MC. MC was seen in older patients than AC (76 vs. 69 years). MC was also more common in females than AC (72.5 vs. 49%). The most striking finding in our analysis was the predominance of poorly differentiated (63%) and undifferentiated (21.7%) pathologies in MC. This was in sharp contrast to AC, where 15.8% of patients were poorly differentiated, and only 2% were undifferentiated. Furthermore, undifferentiated and poorly differentiated MC tumors had a poor prognosis (HR 1.45, 95% CI 1.26-1.68, p<0.001 and HR 1.44, 95% CI 1.29-1.62, p<0.001 respectively) as compared to the other histological grades. Another notable finding in our analysis was the high prevalence of MSI in MC vs. AC (82.4% vs. 25.9%). Cecal MC (HR 1) had the worst prognosis of any colonic site. Left-sided MC tumors also had an inferior prognosis compared to AC (63.21 vs. 87.72 months), although not statistically significant (p=0.217). Conclusions: Colon cancer presenting as undifferentiated or poorly differentiated with associated MSI should raise the possibility of a medullary carcinoma diagnosis. However, given the rarity and difficulty in its pathological delineation, MC may remain underdiagnosed. In the modern treatment era, with the approval of immunotherapy for metastatic MSI colon cancer patients, survival and outcomes for metastatic MC may be improved.

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