The Glasgow Microenvironment Score: an exemplar of contemporary biomarker evolution in colorectal cancer

Author:

Knight Katrina1ORCID,Bigley Christopher2ORCID,Pennel Kathryn2ORCID,Hay Jennifer3,Maka Noori4,McMillan Donald1ORCID,Park James15ORCID,Roxburgh Campbell12ORCID,Edwards Joanne2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Academic Unit of Surgery, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, School of Medicine, Dentistry and Nursing University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

2. School of Cancer Sciences University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

3. Glasgow Tissue Research Facility Queen Elizabeth University Hospital Glasgow UK

4. Department of Pathology Queen Elizabeth University Hospital Glasgow UK

5. Department of Surgery Queen Elizabeth University Hospital Glasgow UK

Abstract

AbstractColorectal cancer remains a leading cause of mortality worldwide. Significant variation in response to treatment and survival is evident among patients with similar stage disease. Molecular profiling has highlighted the heterogeneity of colorectal cancer but has had limited impact in daily clinical practice. Biomarkers with robust prognostic and therapeutic relevance are urgently required. Ideally, biomarkers would be derived from H&E sections used for routine pathological staging, have reliable sensitivity and specificity, and require minimal additional training. The biomarker targets would capture key pathological features with proven additive prognostic and clinical utility, such as the local inflammatory response and tumour microenvironment. The Glasgow Microenvironment Score (GMS), first described in 2014, combines assessment of peritumoural inflammation at the invasive margin with quantification of tumour stromal content. Using H&E sections, the Klintrup–Mäkinen (KM) grade is determined by qualitative morphological assessment of the peritumoural lymphocytic infiltrate at the invasive margin and tumour stroma percentage (TSP) calculated in a semi‐quantitative manner as a percentage of stroma within the visible field. The resulting three prognostic categories have direct clinical relevance: GMS 0 denotes a tumour with a dense inflammatory infiltrate/high KM grade at the invasive margin and improved survival; GMS 1 represents weak inflammatory response and low TSP associated with intermediate survival; and GMS 2 tumours are typified by a weak inflammatory response, high TSP, and inferior survival. The prognostic capacity of the GMS has been widely validated while its potential to guide chemotherapy has been demonstrated in a large phase 3 trial cohort. Here, we detail its journey from conception through validation to clinical translation and outline the future for this promising and practical biomarker.

Publisher

Wiley

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