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Defined morphological criteria allow reliable diagnosis of colorectal serrated polyps and predict polyp genetics
ISSN
1432-2307
0945-6317
Date Issued
2014
Author(s)
Rau, Tillman
Agaimy, Abbas
Gehoff, Anastasia
Geppert, Carol
Knobloch, Katharina
Langner, Cord
Lugli, Alessandro
Groenbus-Lurkin, Irene
Nagtegaal, Iris D.
Saegert, Xavier
Sarbia, Mario
Schneider-Stock, Regine
Vieth, Michael
Zwarthoff, Ellen C.
Hartmann, Arndt
DOI
10.1007/s00428-014-1569-7
Abstract
Criteria for the diagnosis of serrated colorectal lesions (hyperplastic polyp, sessile serrated adenoma without or with dysplasia-which we called mixed polyp-and traditional serrated adenoma) for which consensus has been reached should be validated for applicability in daily practice in terms of inter-observer reproducibility and their association with clinical features and (epi) genetic events. A study set was created from a consecutive series of colorectal polyps (n=1,926) by selecting all sessile serrated adenomas, traditional serrated adenomas and mixed polyps. We added consecutive series of hyperplastic polyps, classical adenomas and normal mucosa samples for a total of 200 specimens. With this series, we conducted an inter-observer study, encompassing ten pathologists with gastrointestinal pathology experience from five European countries, in three rounds in which all cases were microscopically evaluated. An assessment of single morphological criteria was included, and these were correlated with clinical parameters and the mutation status of KRAS, BRAF and PIK3CA and the methylation status of MLH1. Gender, age and localisation were significantly associated with certain types of lesions. Kappa statistics revealed moderate to good interobserver agreement for polyp classification (kappa = 0.56 to 0.63), but for single criteria, this varied considerably (kappa = 0.06 to 0.82). BRAF mutations were frequently found in hyperplastic polyps (86 %, 62/72) and sessile serrated adenomas (80 %, 41/51). KRAS mutations occurred more frequently in traditional serrated adenomas (78%, 7/9) and less so in classical adenomas (20 %, 10/51). Single morphological criteria for sessile serrated