TY - JOUR
T1 - Temporal evolution of metastatic disease
T2 - part II—a novel proposal for subcategorization of metastatic disease from non-neural solid tumors with diverse histologies and locations
AU - Yedururi, Sireesha
AU - Marcal, Leonardo
AU - Morani, Ajaykumar C.
AU - Katabathina, Venkata Subbiah
AU - Jo, Nahyun
AU - Rachamallu, Medhini
AU - Prasad, Srinivasa
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, Japan Radiological Society.
PY - 2021/9
Y1 - 2021/9
N2 - Tumor spread is a continuous process and metastases can further disseminate. Currently, metastatic disease from most primary tumors is subcategorized as M0 if absent and M1 if present. However, metastatic disease in different locations may have different prognostic implications, even if it is from the same primary tumor. The current staging systems for metastatic disease have not evolved to match our understanding of the disease’s evolution or the evolving treatment paradigms. Primary tumor-specific subcategorization of metastatic disease is currently available for a few tumors, but not all of them imply further remote spread of tumor, similar to tumor (T) and N (node) subcategorizations of the TNM staging, nor are they applicable to wide spectrum of other tumors. In this era of precision medicine, tumor-type agnostic therapies based on common biomarkers rather than primary tumor sites are emerging, but a subcategorization system applicable to metastatic disease from diverse primary tumor locations and with diverse histologies is not available. In this article, we discuss the need to further classify the metastatic disease and present a subcategorization applicable to metastatic disease from non-neural solid tumors from different primary tumor sites and with different histologies, which is based on the temporal spread of metastatic disease. Our proposed subcategorization scheme for metastatic disease into M0, M1, M2 and M3, is universally applicable to a diverse spectrum of non-neural solid tumors, and increasing M subcategorization represents further remote spread of tumor.
AB - Tumor spread is a continuous process and metastases can further disseminate. Currently, metastatic disease from most primary tumors is subcategorized as M0 if absent and M1 if present. However, metastatic disease in different locations may have different prognostic implications, even if it is from the same primary tumor. The current staging systems for metastatic disease have not evolved to match our understanding of the disease’s evolution or the evolving treatment paradigms. Primary tumor-specific subcategorization of metastatic disease is currently available for a few tumors, but not all of them imply further remote spread of tumor, similar to tumor (T) and N (node) subcategorizations of the TNM staging, nor are they applicable to wide spectrum of other tumors. In this era of precision medicine, tumor-type agnostic therapies based on common biomarkers rather than primary tumor sites are emerging, but a subcategorization system applicable to metastatic disease from diverse primary tumor locations and with diverse histologies is not available. In this article, we discuss the need to further classify the metastatic disease and present a subcategorization applicable to metastatic disease from non-neural solid tumors from different primary tumor sites and with different histologies, which is based on the temporal spread of metastatic disease. Our proposed subcategorization scheme for metastatic disease into M0, M1, M2 and M3, is universally applicable to a diverse spectrum of non-neural solid tumors, and increasing M subcategorization represents further remote spread of tumor.
KW - Diverse primary tumor histology
KW - Diverse primary tumor location
KW - M category
KW - Metastatic tumor imaging
KW - Subcategorization of metastatic disease
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U2 - 10.1007/s11604-021-01127-3
DO - 10.1007/s11604-021-01127-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 33948787
AN - SCOPUS:85105452083
SN - 1867-1071
VL - 39
SP - 844
EP - 856
JO - Japanese Journal of Radiology
JF - Japanese Journal of Radiology
IS - 9
ER -