Malignant Transformation of Long-Standing Ileal Crohns Disease Likely Favors Signet Ring Cell Adenocarcinoma Histology

Matthew G.K. Benesch, Erek D. Nelson, Shalana B.L. O’Brien

Abstract


Signet ring cell adenocarcinomas (SRCCs) are a rare and aggressive histological subtype of adenocarcinomas typically with poor prognosis usually secondary to late stage at detection. In the small bowel, they constitute only 1% of all malignancies. In the last decade, there have been multiple case reports and small case series that have identified SRCCs, typically in the ileum, in patients with Crohns disease. Crohns disease is a transmural inflammatory condition that normally manifests in the distal ileum and colon, and is known to temporally increase the risk of malignancy. Given the profound rarity of SRCCs, establishing an association between Crohns disease and SRCC is challenging. In this study, we performed a systematic review of case reports and small case series describing small bowel SRCCs in Crohns disease patients. Most cases were found in the distal/terminal ileum, at a mean age of 59 years old. Virtually all tumors were locally advanced (pathological T stage 3 and 4), typically with at least N1 nodal disease. Two case studies (one is a case-control study and the other a cohort design) demonstrated that small bowel SRCC, as opposed to conventional adenocarcinoma, was significantly correlated to a history of Crohns disease (35% vs. 0%, 73.5% vs. 28.5%), with a propensity to arise in the ileum (95% vs. 30%, 66.7% vs. 42.1%), and at earlier mean age (43 vs. 68 years, 53.7 vs. 61.7 years). We additionally used the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database for insights into the clinicoepidemiological characteristics of ileum SRCCs. SRCCs composed 28.1% of all ileal SRCCs, compared to 11.0% for the adenocarcinomas, with a younger age at diagnosis (60.7 vs. 64.6 years), more distant disease at presentation (41.3% vs. 26.4%), and shorter overall median survival time (20 vs. 39 months). In summary, while there is limited direct evidence to support an association between small bowel SRCC and Crohns disease, the phenomenon has been increasingly documented in the literature in the last decade. Clinicians treating Crohns disease patients should consider this in their differential diagnosis, particularly when managing disease complications, as early detection and surgical intervention offer the best prognosis.




World J Oncol. 2023;14(6):447-456
doi: https://doi.org/10.14740/wjon1605

Keywords


Colitis; poorly cohesive carcinomas; Mucinous carcinomas; Signet ring cell carcinomas; Transmural inflammation

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