| Literature DB >> 26983443 |
Takao Kamai1, Hideyuki Abe2, Kyoko Arai2, Satoshi Murakami3, Setsu Sakamoto4, Yasushi Kaji5, Ken-Ichiro Yoshida2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma (HLRCC) is an autosomal dominant tumor susceptibility syndrome, and the disease-related gene has been identified as fumarate hydratase (fumarase, FH). HLRCC-associated kidney cancer is an aggressive tumor characterized by early metastasis to regional lymph nodes and distant organs. Since early diagnosis and provision of definitive therapy is thought to be the best way to reduce the tumor burden, it is widely accepted that germline testing and active surveillance for an at-risk individual from a family with HLRCC is very important. However, it still remains controversial how we should treat HLRCC-associated kidney cancer. We successfully treated the patient with locally advanced HLRCC-associated kidney cancer, who has received active surveillance because of at-risk individual, by radical nephrectomy and extended retroperitoneal lymph node dissection, and examined surgically resected samples from a molecular point of view. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Axitinib; Fumarate hydratase (FH); Hereditary Leiomyomatosis and Renal Cell Cancer (HLRCC); Targeted next-generation sequencing; Type 2 papillary renal cell carcinoma
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26983443 PMCID: PMC4794818 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2272-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Pedigree. Generations are represented by Roman numerals and individuals are shown by Arabic numerals. The present patient is III-8 (indicated by the arrow) and the proband is III-9. “Mut” shows mutation screening. “Mut +” and “Mut −” indicate mutation-positive and mutation-negative individuals, respectively
Fig. 2Positron emission tomography (PET) with [18 F] fluorodeoxyglucose (18 F-FDG PET) / plain computed tomography (CT). Pre: Before treatment with axitinib. Post: After administration of axitinib for 4 weeks. a, d: Plain abdominal CT shows that the primary left renal tumor and enlarged lymph nodes have decreased in size. b, e: SUVmax of the primary tumor decreased from 15.3 to 2.9 after administration of axitinib. c, f: SUVmax of the regional lymph nodes decreased from 7.5 to 2.3 after administration of axitinib
Fig. 3Western blotting. Western blotting for surgically resected tissues (M: marker, N: normal tissue, T1-3: three different parts of tumor tissues). In a patient with cT3bN1M1 clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC-1) who received preoperative axitinib as well as the current patient, tumor tissues obtained by nephrectomy after axitinib treatment showed heterogeneous changes. Some tumor tissue (T2 and T3) showed much lower expression of pAkt (Ser-473), pAkt (Thr-308), and pS6 than other tissue (T1). Similarly, in the other patients with cTanyN1Many ccRCCs (ccRCC-2 to −4) treated with preoperative axitinib, tumor tissues showed heterogeneous pattern. These findings indicate that some parts of the cancer would show a good response to axitinib but other parts would not. On the other hand, in the present patient with cT3aN1M0, renal cell cancer with papillary type 2 (pRCC2), surgically resected cancer tissues (T1 to T3) showed high expression of pAkt (Ser-473) and pAkt (Thr-308), as well as very low expression of pS6, indicating that the mTORC2-Akt signaling may be more important for molecular targeting than the mTORC1-S6 pathway in HLRCC-associated kidney cancer compared with clear cell RCC
Fig. 4Immunohistochemistry. Immunohistochemical analysis of Nrf2 expression using anti-Nrf2 monoclonal antibody in HLRCC-associated kidney cancer (a-c) (X 200 magnification. Scale bars showed 200 μm). a, b: Much of cancer cells showed diffuse strong brown staining in a membrane and cytoplasm for anti-Nrf2 antibody in the proband (III-9) (a) and maternal cousin (III-4) (b) with non-prior therapy. c: Some of viable cancer cell showed weak reaction in the present case (III-8) with neoadjuvant axitinib therapy. d: Clear cell renal cell carcinoma tissues randomly selected for this study showed negative staining
Allele detection of FH-gene using next-generation DNA sequencer
| Sample | Chrom | Position | Ref | Variant | Allele Call | Frequency | Quality | Type | Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blood | chr1 | 241667244 | G | T | Homozygous | 100 | 3825.7 | SNP | 399 |
| chr1 | 241669249 | C | T | Homozygous | 100 | 3797.23 | SNP | 398 | |
| chr1 | 241671938 | G | A | Heterozygous | 63.5 | 1405.16 | SNP | 400 | |
| chr1 | 241675240 | A | – | Homozygous | 100 | 2791.44 | DEL | 387 | |
| chr1 | 241682820 | G | T | Homozygous | 100 | 3806.12 | SNP | 397 | |
| Cancer tissue | chr1 | 241667244 | G | T | Homozygous | 100 | 3853.67 | SNP | 400 |
| chr1 | 241669249 | C | T | Homozygous | 100 | 3853.67 | SNP | 400 | |
| chr1 | 241671938 | G | A | Heterozygous | 45 | 669.28 | SNP | 400 | |
| chr1 | 241675240 | A | – | Homozygous | 100 | 2733.7 | DEL | 383 | |
| chr1 | 241682820 | G | T | Homozygous | 100 | 3796.5 | SNP | 396 | |
| Positive Ctrla | chr1 | 241667233 | C | T | Heterozygous | 55.5 | 1058.17 | SNP | 400 |
| chr1 | 241667244 | G | T | Heterozygous | 51.3 | 888.08 | SNP | 398 | |
| chr1 | 241675240 | A | – | Homozygous | 100 | 2622.8 | DEL | 385 |
Positive Ctrla : Centre d'Étude du Polymorphisme Human, http://www.cephb.fr/ (for chromosome 2 linkage map and DNA from individual 1347–02)
The average Ion PGM™ sequencing output per sample was 150 mega bases with 0.9 million sequencing reads. Of the 16 amplicons in the FH-gene, 100 % achieved a minimum average sequencing depth of 500X and mean depth were 28,419X-34,591X. In samples, the Ion PGM™ detected single-nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) and deletions, details of results are shown in Table 1. In blood sample and cancer tissue sample of the current case, SNPs same as the past report [7], hetero on FH-gene exon5, was detected, and new alleles were detected at intron regions
SNPs of chr1:241,667,244 bp and chr1:241,675,240 were common between blood, cancer samples and normal human cell (CEPH individuals 1347–02 control DNA, Lifetechnologies). This result indicates these SNPs have low association with cancer. Other variants were located at intron; such mutations may cause a proportion of mature messenger RNA with improperly spliced intron sequences. So we will try gene expression profiling, RNA-seq, for these samples including fusion-gene analysis