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Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumor Cure - Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumor
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In medical oncology, gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) are a
rare tumor of the gastrointestinal tract (1-3% of all
gastrointestinal malignancies).
GIST is a form of connective tissue cancer, or sarcoma. GISTs are
therefore non-epithelial tumors, separate from more common forms of
bowel cancer. 70% occur in the stomach, 20% in the small intestine
and less than 10% in the esophagus. Small tumors are generally
benign, especially when cell division rate is slow, but large tumors
disseminate to the liver, omentum and peritoneal cavity. They rarely
occur in other abdominal organs.
Contents [hide]
1 Signs and symptoms
2 Diagnosis
3 Radiology
4 Pathophysiology
5 Genetics
6 Epidemiology
7 Therapy
8 History
9 Sources
10 References
11 External links
11.1 Research Links
11.2 Patient-Oriented Websites
[edit] Signs and symptoms
Patients present with trouble swallowing, gastrointestinal hemorrhage
or metastases (mainly in the liver). Intestinal obstruction is rare,
due to the tumor's outward pattern of growth. Often, there is a
history of vague abdominal pain or discomfort, and the tumor has
become rather large by time the diagnosis is made.
Generally, the definitive diagnosis is made with a biopsy, which can
be obtained endoscopically, percutaneously with CT or ultrasound
guidance or at the time of surgery.
[edit] Diagnosis
As part of the analysis, blood tests and CT scanning are often
undertaken (see the radiology section).
A biopsy sample will be investigated under the microscope. The
histopathologist identifies the characteristics of GISTs (spindle
cells in 70-80%, epitheloid aspect in 20-30%). Smaller tumors can
usually be found to the muscularis propria layer of the intestinal
wall. Large ones grow, mainly outward, from the bowel wall until the
point where they outstrip their blood supply and necrose (die) on the
inside, forming a cavity that may eventually come to communicate with
the bowel lumen.
When GIST is suspectedas opposed to other causes for similar
tumorsthe histopathologist can use immunohistochemistry
(specific antibodies that stain the molecule CD117 (also known as
c-kit) see below). 95% of all GISTs are CD117-positive (other
possible markers include CD34, desmin, vimentin and others). Other
cells that show CD117 positivity are mast cells.
Some tumors of the stomach and small bowel referred to as
leiomyosarcomas (malignant tumor of smooth muscle) would most likely
be reclassified as GISTs today on the basis of immunohistochemical staining.
[edit] Radiology
Barium fluoroscopic examinations (upper GI series and small bowel
series (small bowel follow-through)) and CT are commonly used to
evaluate the patient with upper abdominal pain. Both are adequate to
make the diagnosis of GIST, although small tumors may be missed,
especially in cases of a suboptimal examination.
Small GISTs appear as intramural masses. When large (> 5 cm), they
most commonly grow outward from the bowel. Internal calcifications
may be present. As the tumor outstrips its blood supply, it can
necrose internally, creating a central fluid-filled cavity that can
eventually ulcerate into the lumen of the bowel or stomach.
The tumor can directly invade adjacent structures in the abdomen. The
most common site of spread is to the liver. Spread to the peritoneum
may be seen. In distinction to gastric adenocarcinoma or
gastric/small bowel lymphoma, malignant adenopathy (swollen lymph
nodes) is uncommon (<10%).
[edit] Pathophysiology
GISTs are thought to arise from interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC),[1]
that are normally part of the autonomic nervous system of the
intestine. They serve a pacemaker function in controlling motility.
Most (50-80%) GISTs arise because of a mutation in a gene called
c-kit. This gene encodes a transmembrane receptor for a growth factor
termed scf (stem cell factor). The c-kit/CD117 receptor is expressed
on ICCs and a large number of other cells, mainly bone marrow cells,
mast cells, melanocytes and several others. In the gut, however, a
mass staining positive for CD117 is likely to be a GIST, arising from
ICC cells.
The c-kit molecule comprises a long extracellular domain, a
transmembrane segment, and an intracellular part. Mutations generally
occur in the DNA encoding the intracellular part (exon 11), which
acts as a tyrosine kinase to activate other enzymes. Mutations make
c-kit function independent of activation by scf, leading to a high
cell division rate and possibly genomic instability. It is likely
that additional mutations are "required" for a cell with a
c-kit mutation to develop into a GIST, but the c-kit mutation is
probably the first step of this process.
The tyrosine kinase function of c-kit is vital in the therapy for
GISTs, please see below.
[edit] Genetics
Although some families with hereditary GISTs have been described,
most cases are sporadic.
In GIST cells, the c-kit gene is mutated approximately 85% to 90% of
the time. 35% of the GIST cells that do not have a mutated c-kit
("wild-type") do have a mutation in another gene, PDGFR-a
(platelet derived growth factor receptor alpha), which is a related
tyrosine kinase. Mutations in the exons 11, 9 and rarely 13 and 17 of
the c-kit gene are known to occur in GIST. D816V point mutations in
c-kit exon 17 are responsible for resistance to targeted therapy
drugs like imatinib mesylate. Mutations in c-kit and PDGFrA are
mutually exclusive[1][2].
[edit] Epidemiology
GISTs occur in 10-20 per one million people; one out of 3-4 is
malignant. The true incidence might be higher, as novel laboratory
methods are much more sensitive in diagosing GISTs. In all, there are
approximately 3000-3500 cases of GIST per year in the United States.
This makes GIST the most common form of sarcoma, which constitutes
more than 70 types of cancer, but in all forms constitutes less than
1% of all cancer.
[edit] Therapy
Most small GISTs (<5 and especially <2 cm) with a low rate of
mitosis (<5 dividing cells per 50 high-power fields) are benign
andafter surgerydo not require adjuvant therapy.
Larger GISTs (>5 cm), and especially when the cell division rate
is high (>6 mitoses/50 HPF), may disseminate and/or recur.
Until recently, GISTs were notorious for being resistant to
chemotherapy, with a success rate of <5%. Recently, the c-kit
tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib (Glivec®/Gleevec®), a drug
initially marketed for chronic myelogenous leukemia, was found to be
useful in treating GISTs, leading to a 40-70% response rate in
metastatic or inoperable cases.
Patients who become refractory on imatinib may respond to the
multiple tyrosine kinase inhibitor sunitinib (marketed as Sutent).
Therapy for GIST is best directed by physicians familiar with the
disease. Such doctors, specifically surgeons and medical oncologists,
are found at major cancer centers.
[edit] History
Until the 1990s, all non-epithelial tumors of the gastrointestinal
tract were called "gastrointestinal stromal tumors" from
smooth muscle origin. Histopathologists generally did not distinguish
between the types, as this did affect neither therapy nor prognosis.
Subsequently, CD34, and later CD117 were identified as markers that
could distinguish the various types.
[edit] Sources
De Silva MV, Reid R. Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST): c-kit
mutations, CD117 expression, differential diagnosis and targeted
cancer therapy with imatinib. Pathol Oncol Res 2003;9:13-9. PMID 12704441.
Kitamura Y, Hirota S, Nishida T. Gastrointestinal stromal tumors
(GIST): a model for molecule-based diagnosis and treatment of solid
tumors. Cancer Sci 2003:94:315-20. PMID 12824897.
[edit] References
^ Miettinen M, Lasota J (2006). "Gastrointestinal stromal
tumors: review on morphology, molecular pathology, prognosis, and
differential diagnosis". Arch Pathol Lab Med 130 (10): 1466-78.
PMID 17090188.
[edit] External links
[edit] Research Links
American Society of Clinical Oncology "Other Gastrointestinal
Cancer" Abstracts (2005)
[edit] Patient-Oriented Websites
GIST Support International, An international organization for the
support of GIST patients, families, and friends. Includes detailed
information from some of the foremost experts on GIST, links to
research, treatment options, GIST registry, adult and pediatric
listservs, and affiliated GSI-Wiki.
Life Raft Group International GIST Advocacy Organization. Provides
support to patients & families, through information, education,
and innovative research.
GIST Info Patient links, includes information on new clinical trials
and research
American Cancer Society Patient Guide to GIST tumors.
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastrointestinal_stromal_tumor"
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