81711-4
Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen
Active
81696-7 Microsatellite instability markers assessed [#] in Cancer specimen
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Microsatellite instability markers assessed
- Property
- Num
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Cancer specimen
- Scale
- Qn
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- MSI mark assess Ca spec
- Display Name
- Microsatellite instability markers assessed (Cancer specimen) [#]
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Microsatellite instability markers assessed, Cancer specimen
Basic Attributes
- Class
- PATH
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.56
- Last Updated
- Version 2.61
- Change Reason
- Updated System from "Tiss" to "Cancer.XXX" because MSI testing is performed on cancer specimens.; Updated System from "Cancer.XXX" to clarify that the test is performed on a cancer specimen.
- Order vs. Observation
- Observation
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
85905-8 | Cancer pathology panel - Colorectal cancer specimen by CAP cancer protocols |
81711-4 | Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Marcadores evaluados de inestabilidad de microsatélites: Synonyms: Cuantitativo |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Marcadores de inestabilidad de microsatélites evaluados: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Marcatori di instabilità dei microsatelliti valutati: Synonyms: Campione di tumore Instabilità dei microsatelliti Neoplasia maligna Numero (conta) Patologia Punto nel tempo (episodio) |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 所评估的微卫星不稳定性标记: Synonyms: MSI 个数; |
Example Units
Unit | Source |
---|---|
{#} | Example UCUM Units |
81697-5 Microsatellite instability marker BAT25 in Cancer specimen Qualitative
Part Descriptions
LP212210-1 Microsatellite instability marker BAT25
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a change in the number of repeats of a specific DNA marker in cancer cells compared to the number of repeats present in non-cancerous cells of the same patient. Different tumor types are associated with different MSI markers, and both the presence of MSI in specific markers as well as the the number of distinct markers demonstrating MSI is important. Tumor cells are classified as being stable, having high instability (MSI-H), or having low instability (MSI-L) based on the number of markers demonstrating MSI. MSI analysis may help guide therapy and be a prognostic indicator. Specific MSI markers include BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S2720, NR21, NR24 and MONO27. MSI has been most studied in colorectal cancer, and colorectal tumors that are MSI-H are more likely to be carcinomas than adenomas. MSI has also been studied in other types of cancer, including gastric cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer and Wilms tumor.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Microsatellite instability marker BAT25
- Property
- Find
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Cancer specimen
- Scale
- Ord
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- MSI mark BAT25 Ca spec Ql
- Display Name
- Microsatellite instability marker BAT25 Ql (Cancer specimen)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Microsatellite Instability Marker BAT25, Cancer specimen
Basic Attributes
- Class
- PATH
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.56
- Last Updated
- Version 2.61
- Change Reason
- Updated System from "Tiss" to "Cancer.XXX" because MSI testing is performed on cancer specimens.; Updated System from "Cancer.XXX" to clarify that the test is performed on a cancer specimen.
- Order vs. Observation
- Observation
Example Answer List LL1057-0
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
Stable | LA14122-8 | ||
Unstable | LA14123-6 | ||
Indeterminate Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:82334004 Indeterminate (qualifier value) | LA11884-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
85905-8 | Cancer pathology panel - Colorectal cancer specimen by CAP cancer protocols |
81711-4 | Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Marcador de inestabilidad de microsatélites BAT25: |
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Marcador BAT25 de inestabilidad de microsatélites: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Marcatore BAT25 di instabilità dei microsatelliti: Synonyms: Campione di tumore Instabilità dei microsatelliti Neoplasia maligna Osservazione Patologia Punto nel tempo (episodio) |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 微卫星不稳定性标记 BAT25: Synonyms: MSI 供检查用的材料; |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.
81698-3 Microsatellite instability marker BAT26 in Cancer specimen Qualitative
Part Descriptions
LP212211-9 Microsatellite instability marker BAT26
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a change in the number of repeats of a specific DNA marker in cancer cells compared to the number of repeats present in non-cancerous cells of the same patient. Different tumor types are associated with different MSI markers, and both the presence of MSI in specific markers as well as the the number of distinct markers demonstrating MSI is important. Tumor cells are classified as being stable, having high instability (MSI-H), or having low instability (MSI-L) based on the number of markers demonstrating MSI. MSI analysis may help guide therapy and be a prognostic indicator. Specific MSI markers include BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S2720, NR21, NR24 and MONO27. MSI has been most studied in colorectal cancer, and colorectal tumors that are MSI-H are more likely to be carcinomas than adenomas. MSI has also been studied in other types of cancer, including gastric cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer and Wilms tumor.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Microsatellite instability marker BAT26
- Property
- Find
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Cancer specimen
- Scale
- Ord
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- MSI mark BAT26 Ca spec Ql
- Display Name
- Microsatellite instability marker BAT26 Ql (Cancer specimen)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Microsatellite Instability Marker BAT26, Cancer specimen
Basic Attributes
- Class
- PATH
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.56
- Last Updated
- Version 2.61
- Change Reason
- Updated System from "Tiss" to "Cancer.XXX" because MSI testing is performed on cancer specimens.; Updated System from "Cancer.XXX" to clarify that the test is performed on a cancer specimen.
- Order vs. Observation
- Observation
Example Answer List LL1057-0
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
Stable | LA14122-8 | ||
Unstable | LA14123-6 | ||
Indeterminate Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:82334004 Indeterminate (qualifier value) | LA11884-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
85905-8 | Cancer pathology panel - Colorectal cancer specimen by CAP cancer protocols |
81711-4 | Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Marcador de inestabilidad de microsatélites BAT26: |
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Marcador BAT26 de inestabilidad de microsatélites: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Marcatore BAT26 di instabilità dei microsatelliti: Synonyms: Campione di tumore Instabilità dei microsatelliti Neoplasia maligna Osservazione Patologia Punto nel tempo (episodio) |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 微卫星不稳定性标记 BAT26: Synonyms: MSI 供检查用的材料; |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.
81699-1 Microsatellite instability marker NR21 in Cancer specimen Qualitative
Part Descriptions
LP212212-7 Microsatellite instability marker NR21
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a change in the number of repeats of a specific DNA marker in cancer cells compared to the number of repeats present in non-cancerous cells of the same patient. Different tumor types are associated with different MSI markers, and both the presence of MSI in specific markers as well as the the number of distinct markers demonstrating MSI is important. Tumor cells are classified as being stable, having high instability (MSI-H), or having low instability (MSI-L) based on the number of markers demonstrating MSI. MSI analysis may help guide therapy and be a prognostic indicator. Specific MSI markers include BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S2720, NR21, NR24 and MONO27. MSI has been most studied in colorectal cancer, and colorectal tumors that are MSI-H are more likely to be carcinomas than adenomas. MSI has also been studied in other types of cancer, including gastric cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer and Wilms tumor.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Microsatellite instability marker NR21
- Property
- Find
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Cancer specimen
- Scale
- Ord
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- MSI mark NR21 Ca spec Ql
- Display Name
- Microsatellite instability marker NR21 Ql (Cancer specimen)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Microsatellite Instability Marker NR21, Cancer specimen
Basic Attributes
- Class
- PATH
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.56
- Last Updated
- Version 2.61
- Change Reason
- Updated System from "Tiss" to "Cancer.XXX" because MSI testing is performed on cancer specimens.; Updated System from "Cancer.XXX" to clarify that the test is performed on a cancer specimen.
- Order vs. Observation
- Observation
Example Answer List LL1057-0
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
Stable | LA14122-8 | ||
Unstable | LA14123-6 | ||
Indeterminate Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:82334004 Indeterminate (qualifier value) | LA11884-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
85905-8 | Cancer pathology panel - Colorectal cancer specimen by CAP cancer protocols |
81711-4 | Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Marcador NR21 de inestabilidad de microsatélites: |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Marcador de inestabilidad de microsatélites NR21: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Marcatore NR21 di instabilità dei microsatelliti: Synonyms: Campione di tumore Instabilità dei microsatelliti Neoplasia maligna Osservazione Patologia Punto nel tempo (episodio) |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 微卫星不稳定性标记 NR21: Synonyms: MSI 供检查用的材料; |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.
81700-7 Microsatellite instability marker NR24 in Cancer specimen Qualitative
Part Descriptions
LP212213-5 Microsatellite instability marker NR24
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a change in the number of repeats of a specific DNA marker in cancer cells compared to the number of repeats present in non-cancerous cells of the same patient. Different tumor types are associated with different MSI markers, and both the presence of MSI in specific markers as well as the the number of distinct markers demonstrating MSI is important. Tumor cells are classified as being stable, having high instability (MSI-H), or having low instability (MSI-L) based on the number of markers demonstrating MSI. MSI analysis may help guide therapy and be a prognostic indicator. Specific MSI markers include BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S2720, NR21, NR24 and MONO27. MSI has been most studied in colorectal cancer, and colorectal tumors that are MSI-H are more likely to be carcinomas than adenomas. MSI has also been studied in other types of cancer, including gastric cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer and Wilms tumor.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Microsatellite instability marker NR24
- Property
- Find
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Cancer specimen
- Scale
- Ord
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- MSI mark NR24 Ca spec Ql
- Display Name
- Microsatellite instability marker NR24 Ql (Cancer specimen)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Microsatellite Instability Marker NR24, Cancer specimen
Basic Attributes
- Class
- PATH
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.56
- Last Updated
- Version 2.61
- Change Reason
- Updated System from "Tiss" to "Cancer.XXX" because MSI testing is performed on cancer specimens.; Updated System from "Cancer.XXX" to clarify that the test is performed on a cancer specimen.
- Order vs. Observation
- Observation
Example Answer List LL1057-0
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
Stable | LA14122-8 | ||
Unstable | LA14123-6 | ||
Indeterminate Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:82334004 Indeterminate (qualifier value) | LA11884-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
85905-8 | Cancer pathology panel - Colorectal cancer specimen by CAP cancer protocols |
81711-4 | Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Marcador NR24 de inestabilidad de microsatélites: |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Marcador de inestabilidad de microsatélites NR24: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Marcatore NR24 di instabilità dei microsatelliti: Synonyms: Campione di tumore Instabilità dei microsatelliti Neoplasia maligna Osservazione Patologia Punto nel tempo (episodio) |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 微卫星不稳定性标记 NR24: Synonyms: MSI 供检查用的材料; |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.
81701-5 Microsatellite instability marker MONO27 in Cancer specimen Qualitative
Part Descriptions
LP212214-3 Microsatellite instability marker MONO27
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a change in the number of repeats of a specific DNA marker in cancer cells compared to the number of repeats present in non-cancerous cells of the same patient. Different tumor types are associated with different MSI markers, and both the presence of MSI in specific markers as well as the the number of distinct markers demonstrating MSI is important. Tumor cells are classified as being stable, having high instability (MSI-H), or having low instability (MSI-L) based on the number of markers demonstrating MSI. MSI analysis may help guide therapy and be a prognostic indicator. Specific MSI markers include BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S2720, NR21, NR24 and MONO27. MSI has been most studied in colorectal cancer, and colorectal tumors that are MSI-H are more likely to be carcinomas than adenomas. MSI has also been studied in other types of cancer, including gastric cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer and Wilms tumor.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Microsatellite instability marker MONO27
- Property
- Find
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Cancer specimen
- Scale
- Ord
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- MSI mark MONO27 Ca spec Ql
- Display Name
- Microsatellite instability marker MONO27 Ql (Cancer specimen)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Microsatellite Instability Marker MONO27, Cancer specimen
Basic Attributes
- Class
- PATH
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.56
- Last Updated
- Version 2.61
- Change Reason
- Updated System from "Tiss" to "Cancer.XXX" because MSI testing is performed on cancer specimens.; Updated System from "Cancer.XXX" to clarify that the test is performed on a cancer specimen.
- Order vs. Observation
- Observation
Example Answer List LL1057-0
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
Stable | LA14122-8 | ||
Unstable | LA14123-6 | ||
Indeterminate Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:82334004 Indeterminate (qualifier value) | LA11884-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
85905-8 | Cancer pathology panel - Colorectal cancer specimen by CAP cancer protocols |
81711-4 | Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | MarcadorMONO27 de inestabilidad de microsatélites: |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Marcador de inestabilidad de microsatélites MONO27: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | MarcatoreMONO27 di instabilità dei microsatelliti: Synonyms: Campione di tumore Instabilità dei microsatelliti Neoplasia maligna Osservazione Patologia Punto nel tempo (episodio) |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 微卫星不稳定性标记 MONO27: Synonyms: MSI 供检查用的材料; |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.
81702-3 Microsatellite instability marker D2S123 in Cancer specimen Qualitative
Part Descriptions
LP212215-0 Microsatellite instability marker D2S123
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a change in the number of repeats of a specific DNA marker in cancer cells compared to the number of repeats present in non-cancerous cells of the same patient. Different tumor types are associated with different MSI markers, and both the presence of MSI in specific markers as well as the the number of distinct markers demonstrating MSI is important. Tumor cells are classified as being stable, having high instability (MSI-H), or having low instability (MSI-L) based on the number of markers demonstrating MSI. MSI analysis may help guide therapy and be a prognostic indicator. Specific MSI markers include BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S2720, NR21, NR24 and MONO27. MSI has been most studied in colorectal cancer, and colorectal tumors that are MSI-H are more likely to be carcinomas than adenomas. MSI has also been studied in other types of cancer, including gastric cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer and Wilms tumor.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Microsatellite instability marker D2S123
- Property
- Find
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Cancer specimen
- Scale
- Ord
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- MSI mark D2S123 Ca spec Ql
- Display Name
- Microsatellite instability marker D2S123 Ql (Cancer specimen)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Microsatellite Instability Marker D2S123, Cancer specimen
Basic Attributes
- Class
- PATH
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.56
- Last Updated
- Version 2.61
- Change Reason
- Updated System from "Tiss" to "Cancer.XXX" because MSI testing is performed on cancer specimens.; Updated System from "Cancer.XXX" to clarify that the test is performed on a cancer specimen.
- Order vs. Observation
- Observation
Example Answer List LL1057-0
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
Stable | LA14122-8 | ||
Unstable | LA14123-6 | ||
Indeterminate Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:82334004 Indeterminate (qualifier value) | LA11884-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
85905-8 | Cancer pathology panel - Colorectal cancer specimen by CAP cancer protocols |
81711-4 | Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Marcador D2S123 de inestabilidad de microsatélites: |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Marcador de inestabilidad de microsatélites D2S123: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Marcatore D2S123 di instabilità dei microsatelliti: Synonyms: Campione di tumore Instabilità dei microsatelliti Neoplasia maligna Osservazione Patologia Punto nel tempo (episodio) |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 微卫星不稳定性标记 D2S123: Synonyms: MSI 供检查用的材料; |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.
81703-1 Microsatellite instability marker D5S346 in Cancer specimen Qualitative
Part Descriptions
LP212216-8 Microsatellite instability marker D5S346
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a change in the number of repeats of a specific DNA marker in cancer cells compared to the number of repeats present in non-cancerous cells of the same patient. Different tumor types are associated with different MSI markers, and both the presence of MSI in specific markers as well as the the number of distinct markers demonstrating MSI is important. Tumor cells are classified as being stable, having high instability (MSI-H), or having low instability (MSI-L) based on the number of markers demonstrating MSI. MSI analysis may help guide therapy and be a prognostic indicator. Specific MSI markers include BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S2720, NR21, NR24 and MONO27. MSI has been most studied in colorectal cancer, and colorectal tumors that are MSI-H are more likely to be carcinomas than adenomas. MSI has also been studied in other types of cancer, including gastric cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer and Wilms tumor.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Microsatellite instability marker D5S346
- Property
- Find
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Cancer specimen
- Scale
- Ord
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- MSI mark D5S346 Ca spec Ql
- Display Name
- Microsatellite instability marker D5S346 Ql (Cancer specimen)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Microsatellite Instability Marker D5S346, Cancer specimen
Basic Attributes
- Class
- PATH
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.56
- Last Updated
- Version 2.61
- Change Reason
- Updated System from "Tiss" to "Cancer.XXX" because MSI testing is performed on cancer specimens.; Updated System from "Cancer.XXX" to clarify that the test is performed on a cancer specimen.
- Order vs. Observation
- Observation
Example Answer List LL1057-0
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
Stable | LA14122-8 | ||
Unstable | LA14123-6 | ||
Indeterminate Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:82334004 Indeterminate (qualifier value) | LA11884-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
85905-8 | Cancer pathology panel - Colorectal cancer specimen by CAP cancer protocols |
81711-4 | Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Marcador D5S346 de inestabilidad de microsatélites: |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Marcador de inestabilidad de microsatélites D5S346: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Marcatore D5S346 di instabilità dei microsatelliti: Synonyms: Campione di tumore Instabilità dei microsatelliti Neoplasia maligna Osservazione Patologia Punto nel tempo (episodio) |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 微卫星不稳定性标记 D5S346: Synonyms: MSI 供检查用的材料; |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.
81704-9 Microsatellite instability marker D17S250 in Cancer specimen Qualitative
Part Descriptions
LP212217-6 Microsatellite instability marker D17S250
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a change in the number of repeats of a specific DNA marker in cancer cells compared to the number of repeats present in non-cancerous cells of the same patient. Different tumor types are associated with different MSI markers, and both the presence of MSI in specific markers as well as the the number of distinct markers demonstrating MSI is important. Tumor cells are classified as being stable, having high instability (MSI-H), or having low instability (MSI-L) based on the number of markers demonstrating MSI. MSI analysis may help guide therapy and be a prognostic indicator. Specific MSI markers include BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S2720, NR21, NR24 and MONO27. MSI has been most studied in colorectal cancer, and colorectal tumors that are MSI-H are more likely to be carcinomas than adenomas. MSI has also been studied in other types of cancer, including gastric cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer and Wilms tumor.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Microsatellite instability marker D17S250
- Property
- Find
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Cancer specimen
- Scale
- Ord
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- MSI mark D17S250 Ca spec Ql
- Display Name
- Microsatellite instability marker D17S250 Ql (Cancer specimen)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Microsatellite Instability Marker D17S250, Cancer specimen
Basic Attributes
- Class
- PATH
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.56
- Last Updated
- Version 2.61
- Change Reason
- Updated System from "Tiss" to "Cancer.XXX" because MSI testing is performed on cancer specimens.; Updated System from "Cancer.XXX" to clarify that the test is performed on a cancer specimen.
- Order vs. Observation
- Observation
Example Answer List LL1057-0
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
Stable | LA14122-8 | ||
Unstable | LA14123-6 | ||
Indeterminate Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:82334004 Indeterminate (qualifier value) | LA11884-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
85905-8 | Cancer pathology panel - Colorectal cancer specimen by CAP cancer protocols |
81711-4 | Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Marcador 17S250 de inestabilidad de microsatélites: |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Marcador de inestabilidad de microsatélites D17S250: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Marcatore D17S250di instabilità dei microsatelliti: Synonyms: Campione di tumore Instabilità dei microsatelliti Neoplasia maligna Osservazione Patologia Punto nel tempo (episodio) |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 微卫星不稳定性标记 D17S250: Synonyms: MSI 供检查用的材料; |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.
81709-8 Microsatellite markers exhibiting instability [#] in Cancer specimen
Part Descriptions
LP212220-0 Microsatellite markers exhibiting instability
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a change in the number of repeats of a specific DNA marker in cancer cells compared to the number of repeats present in non-cancerous cells of the same patient. Different tumor types are associated with different MSI markers, and both the presence of MSI in specific markers as well as the the number of distinct markers demonstrating MSI is important. Tumor cells are classified as being stable, having high instability (MSI-H), or having low instability (MSI-L) based on the number of markers demonstrating MSI. MSI analysis may help guide therapy and be a prognostic indicator. Specific MSI markers include BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S2720, NR21, NR24 and MONO27. MSI has been most studied in colorectal cancer, and colorectal tumors that are MSI-H are more likely to be carcinomas than adenomas. MSI has also been studied in other types of cancer, including gastric cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer and Wilms tumor.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Microsatellite markers exhibiting instability
- Property
- Num
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Cancer specimen
- Scale
- Qn
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- MSI mark found Ca spec
- Display Name
- Microsatellite markers exhibiting instability (Cancer specimen) [#]
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Microsatellite markers exhibiting instability, Cancer specimen
Basic Attributes
- Class
- PATH
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.56
- Last Updated
- Version 2.61
- Change Reason
- Updated System from "Tiss" to "Cancer.XXX" because MSI testing is performed on cancer specimens.; Updated System from "Cancer.XXX" to clarify that the test is performed on a cancer specimen.
- Order vs. Observation
- Observation
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
85905-8 | Cancer pathology panel - Colorectal cancer specimen by CAP cancer protocols |
81711-4 | Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Marcadores de inestabilidad de microsatelites: Synonyms: Cuantitativo |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Marcadores de microsatélites que presentan inestabilidad: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Marcatori di microsatelliti che dimostrano instabilità: Synonyms: Campione di tumore Neoplasia maligna Numero (conta) Patologia Punto nel tempo (episodio) |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 表现不稳定性的微卫星标记: Synonyms: 个数; |
Example Units
Unit | Source |
---|---|
{#} | Example UCUM Units |
81708-0 Microsatellite markers exhibiting instability/Microsatellite instability markers assessed in Cancer specimen
Part Descriptions
LP212220-0 Microsatellite markers exhibiting instability
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a change in the number of repeats of a specific DNA marker in cancer cells compared to the number of repeats present in non-cancerous cells of the same patient. Different tumor types are associated with different MSI markers, and both the presence of MSI in specific markers as well as the the number of distinct markers demonstrating MSI is important. Tumor cells are classified as being stable, having high instability (MSI-H), or having low instability (MSI-L) based on the number of markers demonstrating MSI. MSI analysis may help guide therapy and be a prognostic indicator. Specific MSI markers include BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S2720, NR21, NR24 and MONO27. MSI has been most studied in colorectal cancer, and colorectal tumors that are MSI-H are more likely to be carcinomas than adenomas. MSI has also been studied in other types of cancer, including gastric cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer and Wilms tumor.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
LP212221-8 Microsatellite instability markers assessed
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a change in the number of repeats of a specific DNA marker in cancer cells compared to the number of repeats present in non-cancerous cells of the same patient. Different tumor types are associated with different MSI markers, and both the presence of MSI in specific markers as well as the the number of distinct markers demonstrating MSI is important. Tumor cells are classified as being stable, having high instability (MSI-H), or having low instability (MSI-L) based on the number of markers demonstrating MSI. MSI analysis may help guide therapy and be a prognostic indicator. Specific MSI markers include BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S2720, NR21, NR24 and MONO27. MSI has been most studied in colorectal cancer, and colorectal tumors that are MSI-H are more likely to be carcinomas than adenomas. MSI has also been studied in other types of cancer, including gastric cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer and Wilms tumor.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Microsatellite markers exhibiting instability/Microsatellite instability markers assessed
- Property
- NFr
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Cancer specimen
- Scale
- Qn
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- MSI mark found/MSI mark stud NFr Ca spec
- Display Name
- Microsatellite markers exhibiting instability/Microsatellite instability markers assessed (Cancer specimen)
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Microsatellite markers exhibiting instability/Microsatellite Instability Markers Assessed, Cancer specimen
Basic Attributes
- Class
- PATH
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.56
- Last Updated
- Version 2.61
- Change Reason
- Updated System from "Tiss" to "Cancer.XXX" because MSI testing is performed on cancer specimens.; Updated System from "Cancer.XXX" to clarify that the test is performed on a cancer specimen.
- Order vs. Observation
- Observation
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
85905-8 | Cancer pathology panel - Colorectal cancer specimen by CAP cancer protocols |
81711-4 | Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Marcadores de inestabilidad de microsatelites/Marcadores de inestabilidad de microsatélites evaluados: Synonyms: Cuantitativo |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Marcadores de microsatélites que presentan inestabilidad / Marcadores de inestabilidad de microsatélites evaluados: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Marcatori di microsatelliti che dimostrano instabilità/Marcatori di instabilità dei microsatelliti valutati: Synonyms: Campione di tumore Frazione numerica Instabilità dei microsatelliti Neoplasia maligna Patologia Punto nel tempo (episodio) |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 表现不稳定性的微卫星标记/所评估的微卫星不稳定性标记: Synonyms: MSI 供检查用的材料; |
Example Units
Unit | Source |
---|---|
% | Example UCUM Units |
81695-9 Microsatellite instability [Interpretation] in Cancer specimen Qualitative
Part Descriptions
LP36464-3 Microsatellite instability
The appearance of abnormally long or short microsatellites in an individual's DNA is referred to as microsatellite instability. Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a condition manifested by damaged DNA due to defects in the normal DNA repair process. Sections of DNA called microsatellites, which consist of a sequence of repeating units of 1-6 base pairs in length, become unstable and can shorten or lengthen. Microsatellites are also known as simple sequence repeats (SSRs).
Copyright Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ for details.
Source: Wikipedia, Wikipedia
LP36464-3 Microsatellite instability
Microsatellite instability (MSI) is a change in the number of repeats of a specific DNA marker in cancer cells compared to the number of repeats present in non-cancerous cells of the same patient. Different tumor types are associated with different MSI markers, and both the presence of MSI in specific markers as well as the the number of distinct markers demonstrating MSI is important. Tumor cells are classified as being stable, having high instability (MSI-H), or having low instability (MSI-L) based on the number of markers demonstrating MSI. MSI analysis may help guide therapy and be a prognostic indicator. Specific MSI markers include BAT25, BAT26, D2S123, D5S346, D17S2720, NR21, NR24 and MONO27. MSI has been most studied in colorectal cancer, and colorectal tumors that are MSI-H are more likely to be carcinomas than adenomas. MSI has also been studied in other types of cancer, including gastric cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer and Wilms tumor.
Source: Regenstrief LOINC
Fully-Specified Name
- Component
- Microsatellite instability
- Property
- Imp
- Time
- Pt
- System
- Cancer specimen
- Scale
- Ord
- Method
Additional Names
- Short Name
- MSI Ca spec-Imp
- Display Name
- Microsatellite instability Ql (Cancer specimen) [Interp]
- Consumer Name Alpha Get Info
- Microsatellite instability, Cancer specimen
Basic Attributes
- Class
- PATH
- Type
- Laboratory
- First Released
- Version 2.56
- Last Updated
- Version 2.61
- Change Reason
- Updated System from "Tiss" to "Cancer.XXX" because MSI testing is performed on cancer specimens.; Updated System from "Cancer.XXX" to clarify that the test is performed on a cancer specimen.
- Order vs. Observation
- Observation
Example Answer List LL3994-2
Answer | Code | Score | Answer ID |
---|---|---|---|
Stable | LA14122-8 | ||
MSI-L | LA26202-4 | ||
MSI-H | LA26203-2 | ||
Indeterminate Copyright http://snomed.info/sct ID:82334004 Indeterminate (qualifier value) | LA11884-6 |
Member of these Panels
LOINC | Long Common Name |
---|---|
85905-8 | Cancer pathology panel - Colorectal cancer specimen by CAP cancer protocols |
81711-4 | Microsatellite instability marker panel - Cancer specimen |
Language Variants Get Info
Tag | Language | Translation |
---|---|---|
es-ES | Spanish (Spain) | Inestabilidad microsatelite: |
es-MX | Spanish (Mexico) | Inestabilidad de microsatélites: |
it-IT | Italian (Italy) | Microsatelliti, instabilità: Synonyms: Campione di tumore Impressione/interpretazione di studio Instabilità dei microsatelliti Neoplasia maligna Patologia Punto nel tempo (episodio) |
zh-CN | Chinese (China) | 微卫星不稳定性: Synonyms: MSI 供检查用的材料; |
Third Party Copyright
This material includes SNOMED Clinical Terms® (SNOMED CT®) which is used by permission of the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO) under license. All rights reserved. SNOMED CT® was originally created by The College of American Pathologists. "SNOMED" and "SNOMED CT" are registered trademarks of the IHTSDO.
This material includes content from the US Edition to SNOMED CT, which is developed and maintained by the U.S. National Library of Medicine and is available to authorized UMLS Metathesaurus Licensees from the UTS Downloads site at https://uts.nlm.nih.gov.
Use of SNOMED CT content is subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the SNOMED CT Affiliate License Agreement. It is the responsibility of those implementing this product to ensure they are appropriately licensed and for more information on the license, including how to register as an Affiliate Licensee, please refer to http://www.snomed.org/snomed-ct/get-snomed-ct or info@snomed.org<mailto:info@snomed.org>. This may incur a fee in SNOMED International non-Member countries.