Molecular Pathology of Anaplastic Thyroid Carcinomas: A Retrospective Study of 144 Cases
Background: Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) is a rare tumor, with poorly defined oncogenic molecular mechanisms and limited therapeutic options contributing to its poor prognosis. The aims of this retrospective study were to determine the frequency of anaplastic lymphoma kinase ( ALK ) translocat...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Thyroid (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2017-05, Vol.27 (5), p.682-692 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background:
Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) is a rare tumor, with poorly defined oncogenic molecular mechanisms and limited therapeutic options contributing to its poor prognosis. The aims of this retrospective study were to determine the frequency of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (
ALK
) translocations and to identify the mutational profile of ATC including
TERT
promoter mutations.
Methods and Materials:
One hundred and forty-four ATC cases were collected from 10 centers that are a part of the national French network for management of refractory thyroid tumors. Fluorescence
in situ
hybridization analysis for
ALK
rearrangement was performed on tissue microarrays. A panel of 50 genes using next-generation sequencing and
TERT
promoter mutations using Sanger sequencing were also screened.
Results:
Fluorescence
in situ
hybridization was interpretable for 90 (62.5%) cases. One (1.1%) case was positive for an
ALK
rearrangement with a borderline threshold (15% positive cells). Next-generation sequencing results were interpretable for 94 (65.3%) cases, and Sanger sequencing (
TERT
) for 98 (68.1%) cases. A total of 210 mutations (intronic and exonic) were identified.
TP53
alterations were the most frequent (54.4%). Forty-three percent harbored a mutation in the
(H-K-N)RAS
genes, 13.8% a mutation in the
BRAF
gene (essentially
p.V600E
), 17% a
PI3K
-
AKT
pathway mutation, 6.4% both
RAS
and
PI3K
pathway mutations, and 4.3% both
TP53
and
PTEN
mutations. Nearly 10% of the cases showed no mutations of the
RAS
,
PI3K
-
AKT
pathways, or TP53, with mutations of
ALK
,
ATM
,
APC
,
CDKN2A
,
ERBB2
,
RET
, or
SMAD4
, including mutations not yet described in thyroid tumors. Genes encoding potentially druggable targets included: mutations in the
ATM
gene in four (4.3%) cases, in
ERBB2
in one (1.1%) case, in
MET
in one (1.1%) case, and in
ALK
in one (1.1%) case. A
TERT
promoter alteration was found in 53 (54.0%) cases, including 43 C228T and 10 C250T mutations. Three out of our cases did not harbor mutations in the panel of genes with therapeutic interest.
Conclusion:
This study confirms that
ALK
rearrangements in ATC are rare and that the mutational landscape of ATC is heterogeneous, with many genes implicated in the follicular epithelial cell dedifferentiation process. This may explain the limited effectiveness of targeted therapeutic options tested so far. |
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ISSN: | 1050-7256 1557-9077 |
DOI: | 10.1089/thy.2016.0254 |