Really? so a typical mod diff colon pt1 cancer in an 80 year old warrants testing. Your oncologists sound like a bunch of *****s.
Since when did oncologists know anything about the appropriate ordering of pathology tests anyway.
Can you please support your practice by a recommendation by an authoritative source such as cap or asco that says every single colon cancer should be tested for mmr by Ihc.
Caveat: I don't have a complete understanding of the literature on this subject, but the following is what I've learned from doing a quick search tonight, and I think it corroborates what I've heard discussed at various tumor boards
First regarding Lynch, check out this seminal paper from NEJM.
N Engl J Med 2005;352;1851
Using a cutoff of 50 years would have missed almost half of the Lynch patients (10/23), and a cutoff of 60 years would have missed 5/23. Admittedly, an n of 23 isn't overwhelming but I was surprised at how old some of those patients were (There was an 87 year old!)
Next, regarding the predictive/prognostic aspect of MSI testing:
J Natl Compr Canc Netw 2011;9:13-25 sums things up pretty well.
It's a pretty settled issue that MSI status provides prognostic information. It's debatable as to whether the value this provides to patients is worth the cost of 4 stains. I guess our oncologists have decided that it is.
What is also debatable is its ability to predict response to chemotherapy, although it seems like the data is sufficient enough for NCCN to recommend testing, at least for stage II disease.
And lastly, here is a CAP publication on the issue
http://www.cap.org/apps/cap.portal?_nfpb=true&cntvwrPtlt_actionOverride=%2Fportlets%2FcontentViewer%2Fshow&_windowLabel=cntvwrPtlt&cntvwrPtlt{actionForm.contentReference}=committees%2Ftechnology%2Fmicrosatellite_testing.html&_state=maximized&_pageLabel=cntvwr