The clinicopathologic significance of mucus production by adenocarcinoma of the colon and rectum was analyzed in retrospective study with stage matched non-mucus producing control carcinomas. Mucinous carcinoma of the colon and rectum comprised 132 (15%) of 893 cases of colorectal carcinoma. The rectum was the most common site (33% of cases). While 120 mucinous cancers had a poorer five-year survival than non-mucinous tumors (34% vs. 53%, p less than .005), these had a particularly bad prognosis in the rectum (18% 5 year survival vs. 49% for the non-mucinous tumor controls, p less than .00k). The theoretical basis for this location-dependent behavior is considered. From this study, distinctive clinico-pathologic features emerge. There were seven documented cases of ulcerative colitis and 8 additional patients gave a history of "colitis". An additional five patients had received prior pelvic irradiation. Of particular note was the fact that 31% of mucinous carcinomas were associated with villous adenomas, implying a histogenetic relationship. Moreover, this finding again emphasizes the neoplastic potential of the villous adenoma, especially in the rectum where the development of mucinous carcinoma is particularly ominous.
New answer by Medical Oncologist at Mayo Clinic (November 21, 2023)
The mucinous feature is reported to be a poor prognostic feature in colorectal cancer based on some retrospective series (e.g., Symonds and Vickery, PMID 177180, Green et al.,...