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. 2002 Jan;55(1):17-21.
doi: 10.1136/jcp.55.1.17.

Conclusions from a study of venous invasion in stage IV colorectal adenocarcinoma

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Conclusions from a study of venous invasion in stage IV colorectal adenocarcinoma

A Sternberg et al. J Clin Pathol. 2002 Jan.

Abstract

Aims: Venous invasion is an established predictor of prognosis in colorectal cancer (CRC). The reported incidence of venous invasion in CRC specimens varies between 10% and 89.5%, mainly as a result of interobserver variability and differences in specimen processing (for example, staining with haematoxylin and eosin (H+E) alone versus the addition of an elastic fibre stain). This study was performed with three purposes in mind, namely: (1) To assess and compare the incidence of venous invasion diagnosed on H+E stained tissue versus tissue stained with both H+E and an elastic fibre stain. (2) To estimate the inherent false negative rate associated with the diagnosis of venous invasion by histopathological evaluation of resected CRC specimens. (3) To compare the resulting data regarding incidence, quantity, site, and type of venous invasion to the pertinent literature.

Methods: Venous invasion was assessed on sections from 81 CRCs resected from patients with synchronous distant metastases (hepatic and non-hepatic). Only stage IV tumours were studied for the following reasons: (1) it can be assumed that in all patients with distant haematogenous metastases venous invasion had occurred, thus enabling the false negative rate to be calculated; (2) there can be no dispute about the clinical relevance of the various characteristics of venous invasion identified in the tumours of patients with synchronous distant haematogenous metastases; and (3) to eliminate the effect of variance in tumour stage on the incidence of venous invasion. Initially, H+E stained sections were studied for venous invasion. Sections that were negative or questionable with regard to venous invasion were then stained with an elastic fibre stain, and a second search for venous invasion was carried out. Venous invasion was characterised by incidence, quantity, type, and site. The chi(2) test for independence was used to compare the incidence of venous invasion in colonic versus rectal and rectosigmoid primary tumours, and in patients with hepatic versus non-hepatic metastases.

Results: Venous invasion was identified in 42 (51.9%) (of the 81 specimens on H+E stained sections. The addition of the elastic fibre stain enabled the diagnosis of venous invasion in 15 (38.5%) of the remaining 39 specimens, increasing the overall incidence to 57 of 81 cases (70.4%). Of the 57 positive specimens, venous invasion was minimal in 27 (47.4%), intermediate in five, (8.8%) and massive in 25 (43.9%). Only intramural veins were involved in 18 (31.6%), only extramural veins in 26 (45.6%), and both intramural and extramural veins in 13 (22.8%) of the 57 positive specimens. The filling type of venous invasion was found in 41 (71.9%), the floating type in 28 (49.1%), and the infiltrating type in six (10.5%) of the 57 positive specimens. There was no significant difference between the incidence of venous invasion in the colon (42 of 60; 70%) versus rectal and rectosigmoid tumours (15 of 21; 71.4%; p = 0.8539), nor in the incidence of venous invasion in patients with hepatic (49 of 70; 70%) versus non-hepatic (eight of 11; 72.7%) metastases (p = 0.9018).

Conclusions: The addition of an elastic fibre stain enables the identification of venous invasion in a considerable proportion of sections from CRC tumours that are falsely negative for venous invasion on H+E stain alone. The inherent chance of missing venous invasion on histopathological evaluation of CRC tumours stained with H+E and elastic fibre stains is at least 10.5%, and may be as high as 29.6%. In a large proportion of stage IV CRCs, despite the presence of synchronous distant metastases, only a minimal extent of venous invasion (that is, one to two involved veins) is demonstrable in the primary tumour. This suggests that only minimal venous invasion is required for the seeding of clinically relevant haematogenous metastases, and emphasises the careful, dedicated search for venous invasion that is required from the pathologist. Although extramural venous invasion was predominant in stage IV CRCs, in a considerable proportion of tumours (about a third) only intramural venous invasion was found. This suggests that intramural venous invasion may also seed clinically relevant haematogenous metastases, and should therefore also be considered as an indicator of poor prognosis.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Types of venous invasion identified in tissue sections stained by haematoxylin and eosin (H+E) alone. (A) Floating type (H+E; original magnification, ×40); (B) filling type (H+E; original magnification, ×100); (C) combined infiltrating and filling types (H+E; original magnification, ×40).
Figure 2
Figure 2
A small vein with combined infiltrating and filling types of venous invasion, not identified by haematoxylin and eosin (H+E) stain alone, but clearly demonstrated after the addition of an elastic fibre stain (H+E and elastic stain; original magnification, ×40).

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