Radiation Oncology/GIST

< Radiation Oncology

Epidemiology

Rare. 0.1-3% of all GI tumors. But 20% of small bowel tumors. Incidence is 20 per 1,000,000 people / year. Predominantly affects those in their 5th - 7th decades.

Location: 60% from stomach, 30% from small intestine

Symptoms

GI bleeding is most common. Abdominal pain, bowel obstruction.

10% present with metastatic disease. Most common site of metastasis is to the liver. May spread to peritoneal surface.

Pathology

Term GIST was coined in 1983 by Mazur and Clark (PMID 6625048). GISTs were recognized as distinct tumors in the early 1990s, but the correct diagnosis of these tumors was problematic until around 2000.

Originate from the interstitial cell of Cajal, an intestinal pacemaker cell.

Previously were classified as visceral leiomyosarcomas due to their similar appearance histologically. Much of the older data for gastrointestinal sarcomas is therefore of little value because of the mixed histologies.

Immunohistochemistry: KIT (CD-117) positive, CD34 positive, smooth muscle actin variably positive. Negative for desmin. Usually negative for S100 (distinguishes from schwannomas).

Staging

Was added as a separate classification starting with the 7th edition of the AJCC Staging Manual. GISTs were not previously classified by the AJCC.

AJCC 7th Edition (2009)
Primary Tumor

Regional Lymph Nodes

Distant Metastasis

Mitotic Rate

Stage Grouping

For Gastric GISTs:
(includes omentum)
For Small Intestinal GISTs:
(includes esophagus, colorectal, mesentery, and peritoneum)


Prognosis

Malignant potential depends on size and number of mitoses but can be difficult to predict in some cases. Are malignant in about 10-30% of cases.

NIH scale: (based on size and mitotic count) - PMID 12094370

Major and minor criteria: - Bucher et al - PMID 15191872

c-KIT and Imatinib

Approximately 90% contain a mutation in the c-kit protooncogene which encodes the KIT receptor tyrosine kinase. The ligand for KIT is known as stem cell factor, Steel factor, or KIT ligand. The c-kit mutation is a gain-of-function mutation which provides a continuous signal for cell growth without the binding of the normal ligand and creates an antiapoptotic signal.

STI-571 or Imatinib (Gleevec) is a selective inhibitor of the ABL, BCR-ABL, KIT, and PDGF receptor tyrosine kinases. Usually given at a dose of 400-600 mg/day orally.

Treatment

Primary treatment is surgical resection.

Use of Imatinib

Metastatic disease

Used in metastatic disease. Patients without c-kit mutations are less likely to respond.

Trials:

Duration of therapy:

Adjuvant therapy

Neoadjuvant

Radiotherapy

Poor response rate to RT. Only very scanty reports in literature. There have been case reports of RT being used as adjuvant therapy for positive margins and as primary therapy when combined with chemo and immunotherapy.

RT's role may be restricted to palliation: palliation for bleeding, pain


Review

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