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Endometrial Cancer

MSI/dMMR Test - Endometrial Cancer Biomarker

This MSI/dMMR test detects microsatellite instability or deficient DNA mismatch repair in tumors—markers of Lynch syndrome and MSI‑high cancers—so your care team can personalize treatment (including immunotherapy) and pursue family genetic assessment. By identifying risk early, it may prompt increased screening or preventive steps that help reduce the chance of advanced colorectal, endometrial and other Lynch‑associated cancers.

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Key Insights

  • Understand how this test reveals your tumor’s DNA repair status to identify microsatellite instability and mismatch repair deficiency linked to endometrial cancer.
  • Identify whether key mismatch repair proteins (MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2) are functioning, and whether the tumor is MSI-high—findings that help explain tumor behavior and potential hereditary risk.
  • Learn how genetic and epigenetic influences, such as inherited Lynch syndrome or MLH1 promoter methylation, may be shaping your results and future risk profile.
  • Use insights to guide treatment discussions with your clinician, including eligibility for immunotherapy and the need for genetic counseling when Lynch syndrome is suspected.
  • Track whether results are consistent across biopsies or at recurrence to understand stability of the tumor’s biology and response patterns over time.
  • When appropriate, integrate this test with related panels—such as POLE mutation status, p53 status, tumor mutation burden, hormone receptor markers, and standard staging—to build a complete picture that informs prognosis and care planning.

What Is an MSI/dMMR Test?

An MSI/dMMR test evaluates whether an endometrial tumor has impaired DNA mismatch repair (dMMR) or microsatellite instability (MSI), both of which signal a high mutation rate within cancer cells. The test is performed on tumor tissue from an endometrial biopsy or surgical specimen. Pathologists typically use immunohistochemistry (IHC) to check if the mismatch repair proteins MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, and PMS2 are present in tumor cell nuclei. Loss of one or more proteins suggests dMMR. In parallel or as confirmation, PCR or next-generation sequencing (NGS) measures MSI by examining short, repetitive DNA regions that become unstable when repair is faulty. Results are reported as dMMR versus proficient MMR, and MSI-high (MSI-H), MSI-low, or microsatellite stable (MSS), compared to validated reference criteria.

Why it matters: mismatch repair is a core cellular quality-control system. When it falters, mutations accumulate faster, shaping how a tumor grows, how the immune system recognizes it, and how it may respond to treatment. In endometrial cancer, dMMR/MSI-H is common (roughly one-quarter to one-third of cases) and can uncover Lynch syndrome in a subset of patients. Testing gives objective, guideline-aligned data that informs diagnosis, hereditary risk assessment, and therapeutic options—especially the potential benefit from immune checkpoint inhibitors in advanced or recurrent disease.

Why Is It Important to Test Your MSI/dMMR?

MSI and mismatch repair status connect directly to how a tumor maintains its genome. When the repair crew is off duty, errors stack up, creating a mutation-rich cancer that may generate neoantigens—novel signals the immune system can spot. In endometrial cancer, this biology explains several clinical realities: dMMR/MSI-H tumors are a defined molecular subgroup, can indicate an inherited mismatch repair gene variant (Lynch syndrome), and often show different responses to therapy than tumors with intact repair. Testing is especially relevant at initial diagnosis, at recurrence, and when a patient is younger than expected for endometrial cancer or has a family history suggestive of Lynch syndrome. As a relatable analogy, think of this as a quality-control audit for the tumor: are the proofreading tools working, or is the spell-checker broken and letting typos pile up?

Stepping back, MSI/dMMR testing turns a single pathology report into an actionable roadmap. It helps detect hereditary cancer risk, informs prognosis alongside stage and grade, and guides modern treatments like immunotherapy in advanced settings. It also standardizes follow-up decisions—for example, whether to reflex to MLH1 promoter methylation testing when MLH1/PMS2 loss is seen to distinguish sporadic epigenetic silencing from inherited risk. The goal isn’t to “pass” or “fail.” It’s to understand where your tumor sits on the molecular spectrum and use that knowledge to shape safer, smarter long-term care.

What Insights Will I Get From a MSI/dMMR Test?

Your report typically displays results in two complementary ways. First, IHC shows whether the four mismatch repair proteins are present. If one or more are missing in tumor cells (with intact staining in surrounding normal cells as an internal control), the tumor is labeled dMMR. Second, MSI testing classifies the tumor as MSI-high, MSI-low, or microsatellite stable by comparing specific DNA regions to reference standards. “Normal” in this context means what is typical for non-defective repair; “optimal” means a profile associated with clearer therapeutic and hereditary decision-making. Context matters: a dMMR/MSI-H result carries different implications in a newly diagnosed, early-stage tumor than in a recurrent, treatment-resistant one.

Balanced or proficient results suggest intact repair and a mutation rate more in line with typical tumors. That can point to different treatment pathways and a lower likelihood of Lynch syndrome. Variability happens because biology is nuanced—fixation quality of tissue affects IHC, tumor heterogeneity can create patchy staining, and rare tumors exhibit discordance between IHC and MSI. Laboratories mitigate this with validated controls and, when indicated, reflex testing.

Higher-instability or protein-loss findings (MSI-H or dMMR) may indicate a tumor more visible to the immune system and, in advanced settings, potential eligibility for immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy. They also trigger consideration of germline evaluation for Lynch syndrome, particularly when MLH1 loss is not due to promoter methylation. Abnormal results do not equal a specific prognosis by themselves. They are interpreted alongside tumor stage, grade, depth of invasion, lymphovascular space involvement, hormone receptor status, and other molecular markers (such as POLE and p53) to refine risk and options.

The real power here is pattern recognition over time. While MSI/dMMR status is usually stable, retesting at recurrence can confirm whether biology has shifted and whether targeted options remain relevant. When combined with personal history and related biomarkers, this test supports earlier detection of hereditary risk, more precise treatment selection in advanced disease, and a clearer understanding of your path forward—without guesswork.

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Frequently Asked Questions About

What do MSI/dMMR tests measure?

MSI (microsatellite instability) tests measure whether short, repeated DNA sequences (microsatellites) in a tumor have acquired insertions or deletions compared with normal tissue — a sign that the DNA mismatch repair (MMR) system is not correcting replication errors. dMMR (deficient MMR) testing measures whether the core MMR proteins (MLH1, MSH2, MSH6, PMS2) are absent or nonfunctional, typically by immunohistochemistry or by detecting pathogenic mutations in MMR genes.

Clinically, MSI-high or dMMR results indicate a high rate of small insertion/deletion mutations (higher tumor mutational burden), can point to hereditary Lynch syndrome when germline MMR defects are present, and predict benefit from immune checkpoint inhibitors in several cancers; testing is commonly done by PCR/NGS for MSI and by IHC or sequencing for dMMR.

How is your MSI/dMMR sample collected?

MSI/dMMR testing is usually performed on tumor tissue obtained during a biopsy or surgical resection; laboratories typically use formalin‑fixed, paraffin‑embedded (FFPE) tissue blocks or unstained slides for immunohistochemistry (IHC) to assess MMR protein expression and for molecular assays that analyze tumor DNA for microsatellite instability (MSI). Many molecular MSI tests perform best when a matched normal sample (blood or adjacent normal tissue) is also provided so the laboratory can distinguish tumor‑specific changes from inherited variants, though some NGS‑based assays can report MSI from tumor‑only material.

Some laboratories offer blood‑based ("liquid biopsy") MSI testing that analyzes circulating tumor DNA from a standard blood draw; this can be useful when tumor tissue is not available but may have different sensitivity. Sample collection and handling (type of tube, amount of tissue or blood) is arranged by the clinician or collection site according to the test’s instructions. These samples are assessed in a lab to report MSI status or loss of MMR proteins; results are informational and interpreted alongside clinical findings by healthcare providers.

What can my MSI/dMMR test results tell me about my cancer risk?

If your tumor tests as MSI‑high (microsatellite instability–high) or dMMR (deficient mismatch repair), it means the cancer cells have lost normal DNA repair in the mismatch‑repair pathway. That result is associated with a higher likelihood of certain cancers (most commonly colorectal and endometrial, and sometimes gastric, small‑intestinal and urothelial cancers) and with a higher tumor mutation burden; it can indicate the tumor may behave differently from MSI‑stable/proficient tumors and can make immunotherapy a more effective treatment option in some cases.

If your tumor is MSI‑stable or shows proficient MMR, it does not carry the same MSI/dMMR‑related implications, but it does not rule out other inherited or acquired cancer risks. An MSI‑high/dMMR tumor can arise from a somatic change or from an inherited mutation (Lynch syndrome), so the result alone does not quantify your personal lifelong cancer risk — it is one piece of information that doctors and genetic counselors use together with family history, germline testing, and other factors to assess your individual risk and management options.

How accurate or reliable are MSI/dMMR tests?

MSI (microsatellite instability) and dMMR (deficient mismatch repair) testing are well‑validated clinical assays and are generally highly accurate — both IHC for MMR proteins and molecular MSI assays (PCR or NGS-based) show high sensitivity and specificity for detecting mismatch‑repair deficiency, with strong concordance between methods in most studies (commonly above ~90%). Because these tests are used to guide important clinical decisions (Lynch syndrome screening and immunotherapy eligibility), laboratories perform quality‑controlled, validated protocols and many clinicians use complementary testing (IHC plus molecular MSI or NGS) to maximize detection.

How often should I test my MSI/dMMR levels?

Typically you are tested for MSI/dMMR once on the tumor at diagnosis (or when a new primary cancer is found) because MSI/dMMR is a tumor biomarker used to guide treatment and hereditary‑cancer evaluation rather than a routinely monitored lab value.

Repeat testing is only done when clinically indicated — for example, if the cancer recurs or a new tumor appears, if the initial result was inconclusive, or before changing therapy or enrolling in a trial (such as when considering immunotherapy). Germline testing for Lynch syndrome is usually performed once if suspected. Follow your oncologist’s recommendations about when retesting is appropriate for your specific situation.

Are MSI/dMMR test results diagnostic?

No — MSI (microsatellite instability) and dMMR (deficient mismatch repair) test results identify patterns of genomic imbalance or resilience, not standalone medical diagnoses; they signal molecular features that may be associated with certain cancers but are not by themselves diagnostic.

These results must be interpreted in the context of symptoms, clinical exam, medical history, imaging and other laboratory or biomarker data, and reviewed by a qualified clinician who can integrate the findings and determine further diagnostic steps or treatment planning.

How can I improve my MSI/dMMR levels after testing?

MSI (microsatellite instability) and dMMR (deficient mismatch repair) describe characteristics of a tumor’s DNA-repair machinery — they are tumor biomarkers, not “levels” in your blood — and there is no proven way to change a tumor’s MSI/dMMR status through diet, supplements, or lifestyle alone.

What you can do is discuss results with your oncologist or genetic counselor: MSI/dMMR status guides treatment choices (for example immunotherapy may be more effective) and prompts evaluation for inherited mismatch‑repair syndromes (Lynch syndrome), which carries implications for cancer screening and risk‑reducing options for you and relatives. Continue standard healthy behaviors (don’t smoke, maintain healthy weight, follow screening recommendations) and follow specialist recommendations about surveillance, treatment, genetic testing, and any preventive measures appropriate to your situation.

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