Objectives: To assess the prognostic value of combined mismatch DNA repair (MMR) phenotyping in 2 synchronous histomorphologically distinct gastric adenocarcinomas (GADCs), each accompanied by gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) of the proximal small bowel.
Summary background data: A 72-year-old female and a 55-year-old male patient were submitted to partial and total gastrectomy, respectively, with synchronous resection of a GIST in the proximal small bowel. The 2 patients attained contrasting survival outcomes. The female survives disease-free 20 months after surgery having received no chemotherapy. The male who received adjuvant chemotherapy developed metastases in liver and lung, and died 18 months after surgery.
Methods: We phenotype MSH2 and MLH1 protein expression in tumor relative to matched normal tissue by immunohistochemistry.
Results: Immunohistochemistry analysis revealed different combined MMR phenotypes for the 2 histomorhologically distinct GADCs and similar for both GISTs studied.
Conclusions: Good and bad prognosis for disease-free survival of patients based on reduced and elevated combined MMR phenotypic expression of the 2 histomorphologically distinct GADCs, could be explained by disease-associated emergence of genomic MMR alterations in the tumor. The impact of synchronous GISTs with common intermediate MMR phenotypes on patient survival is rather incidental and secondary to predominating GADCs.