Management
Surgical Intervention: Risk-Reducing Gastrectomy
Risk-reducing total gastrectomy with esophagojejunostomy remains the treatment of choice for individuals with CDH1pathogenic variants.[1] Younger (aged <18 y) or older (aged >70 y) individuals require a more individualized approach, given the high morbidity rates associated with this surgery. Gastrectomy can be performed robotically, laparoscopically, or in a traditional, open fashion. Care must always be taken to ensure that surgical margins are free of gastric epithelium.
Functional outcomes after risk-reducing total gastrectomy vary, but weight loss is universal. One series reported an average weight loss of 15% to 20% postsurgery.[2,3] Most patients eventually establish a new normal after surgery, but their nutritional statuses must be closely monitored. Other risks after gastrectomy include the following: nutritional deficiencies, anastomotic leaks, intra-abdominal infections, gastrointestinal symptoms like diarrhea and reflux, and a mortality rate that ranges from 3% to 6%.
Endoscopic Surveillance
Risk-reducing total gastrectomy is the treatment of choice for patients with hereditary diffuse gastric cancer (HDGC) because it is the only way to minimize gastric cancer risk, given the lack of consistently identifiable precursor lesions on endoscopy.[1] When gastrectomy is performed, multiple microscopic foci of signet ring cell carcinoma are typically found. In contrast, targeted, random sampling of the stomach during endoscopy often fails to identify microscopic foci of signet ring cell carcinoma. Since diffuse gastric cancer often results in a grim prognosis and is usually found at an advanced stage, most experts recommend total gastrectomy, regardless of the number of signet ring cell lesions found during endoscopic sampling. In one series, six patients with CDH1 pathogenic variants from one family (mean age, 54 y) underwent risk-reducing total gastrectomy despite an absence of symptoms and normal esophagogastroduodenoscopies (EGDs) with negative random biopsies of the stomach. Microscopic foci of signet ring cell carcinoma were present in all individuals who underwent risk-reducing total gastrectomy.[4]
More recently, researchers performed surveillance EGDs on 20 CDH1 carriers.[5] Suspicious lesions were not found in any participants during EGD examinations. However, signet ring cell carcinoma was found in 40% of patients' endoscopic biopsy samples. Thirty or more random endoscopic biopsies were performed in each participant.
There is a role for endoscopic surveillance in HDGC, particularly for patients who choose to defer risk-reducing total gastrectomy. Other scenarios that may prompt endoscopic surveillance include the following:[1]
- Patients with family histories suggestive of HDGC but for whom no pathogenic variant has been identified.
- Patients with family histories of intestinal-type gastric cancer. This type of gastric cancer is usually not associated with CDH1 pathogenic variants. Therefore, endoscopic surveillance needs to be individualized for these patients.
- Patients who have a CDH1 pathogenic variant and choose to defer risk-reducing total gastrectomy for a year or more. This includes patients who undergo genetic testing at a young age and test positive for a CDH1 pathogenic variant. Risk-reducing gastrectomy is generally not recommended in individuals who are younger than age 18 to 20 years. Despite being warned about endoscopic biopsy's poor rate of HDGC precursor detection, many patients (especially those who are older) will only consider gastrectomy in the event of a positive biopsy.
There are no definitive, identifiable features of early diffuse gastric cancer or diffuse gastric cancer precursors that can be found on endoscopy. Hence, a liberal number of random biopsies are taken from the gastric mucosa during endoscopy since the epithelium that covers signet ring cell carcinoma generally appears normal. Early reports suggested that individuals with HDGC can have many microscopic tumors in the body-antrum transitional zone.[6] However, a more recent study suggested that these tumors typically involve the oxyntic mucosa and the proximal stomach instead.[7]
Several studies have suggested that small, white plaques in the stomach may signify that an underlying signet ring cell carcinoma focus is present. Biopsying these white plaques may improve endoscopic yield.
Figure 3. Several small, white, slightly depressed areas are best seen with narrow-band imaging. These lesions can resemble scars from previous endoscopic biopsies. However, the images above are from a patient who did not have a prior esophagogastroduodenoscopy. A microscopic signet ring cell carcinoma focus was found on this biopsy, although non-targeted biopsies in this patient were also positive for signet ring cell carcinoma.
Another studied reported on 33 patients with CDH1 pathogenic variants (median age, 32 y) who were members of the original Māori family in which HDGC was first discovered. Participants underwent 99 surveillance endoscopies, 93 of which were performed with a mucolytic N-acetylcysteine followed by Congo red–methylene blue dye.[8] Twenty-four of 93 endoscopies exhibited one or more flat, pale patches, which were between 2 mm and 10 mm in diameter. Signet ring cell carcinoma was found in 23 of the 56 patches that were biopsied (41%). The authors concluded that these patches could be better characterized with Congo red–methylene blue chromogenic dyes. Biopsy yields increased when these dyes were used. The authors did, however, express concern that Congo red dye may have carcinogenic properties, and its use has not persisted.
If an endoscopic approach is taken for HDGC management, endoscopic surveillance is recommended annually unless signet ring cell features are found. If signet ring cell lesions are found on endoscopy, discussion with a multidisciplinary team is warranted.[1] However, diffuse gastric cancer risk remains unclear in individuals with foci of signet ring cells found on endoscopy.
References:
- Blair VR, McLeod M, Carneiro F, et al.: Hereditary diffuse gastric cancer: updated clinical practice guidelines. Lancet Oncol 21 (8): e386-e397, 2020.
- Vos EL, Salo-Mullen EE, Tang LH, et al.: Indications for Total Gastrectomy in CDH1 Mutation Carriers and Outcomes of Risk-Reducing Minimally Invasive and Open Gastrectomies. JAMA Surg 155 (11): 1050-1057, 2020.
- Strong VE, Gholami S, Shah MA, et al.: Total Gastrectomy for Hereditary Diffuse Gastric Cancer at a Single Center: Postsurgical Outcomes in 41 Patients. Ann Surg 266 (6): 1006-1012, 2017.
- Norton JA, Ham CM, Van Dam J, et al.: CDH1 truncating mutations in the E-cadherin gene: an indication for total gastrectomy to treat hereditary diffuse gastric cancer. Ann Surg 245 (6): 873-9, 2007.
- Jacobs MF, Dust H, Koeppe E, et al.: Outcomes of Endoscopic Surveillance in Individuals With Genetic Predisposition to Hereditary Diffuse Gastric Cancer. Gastroenterology 157 (1): 87-96, 2019.
- Charlton A, Blair V, Shaw D, et al.: Hereditary diffuse gastric cancer: predominance of multiple foci of signet ring cell carcinoma in distal stomach and transitional zone. Gut 53 (6): 814-20, 2004.
- Fujita H, Lennerz JK, Chung DC, et al.: Endoscopic surveillance of patients with hereditary diffuse gastric cancer: biopsy recommendations after topographic distribution of cancer foci in a series of 10 CDH1-mutated gastrectomies. Am J Surg Pathol 36 (11): 1709-17, 2012.
- Shaw D, Blair V, Framp A, et al.: Chromoendoscopic surveillance in hereditary diffuse gastric cancer: an alternative to prophylactic gastrectomy? Gut 54 (4): 461-8, 2005.