High-grade dysplasia associated with fundic gland polyposis in a familial adenomatous polyposis patient, with special reference to APC mutation profiles

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Abstract

We report a patient with familial adenomatous polyposis who developed high-grade dysplasia against a background of fundic gland polyposis. Two large high-grade dysplasia lesions were found in the gastric body, where numerous fundic gland polyps were present. In both lesions, the dysplastic epithelium covered non-neoplastic oxyntic glands that occasionally exhibit cystic changes. A genetic analysis for APC (adenomatous polyposis coli) revealed a somatic 50-bp deletion involving codons 1502-1517 and 2-bp deletion at codon 1465 in each lesion of high-grade dysplasia. In contrast, six of the 18 fundic gland polyps were found to harbor an identical mutation: 1-bp insertion at codon 1556. Both lesions of high-grade dysplasia and the fundic gland polyps were similarly located in the fundic gland area and were caused by the inactivaticn of APC; however, their mutation profiles of APC were different. These results imply that fundic gland polyps and high-grade dysplasia of the stomach have distinct preferences for APC genotypes in their development.

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Sekine, S., Shimoda, T., Nimura, S., Nakanishi, Y., Akasu, T., Katai, H., … Hirohashi, S. (2004). High-grade dysplasia associated with fundic gland polyposis in a familial adenomatous polyposis patient, with special reference to APC mutation profiles. Modern Pathology, 17(11), 1421–1426. https://doi.org/10.1038/modpathol.3800178

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