| Literature DB >> 27813512 |
Nancy M Joseph1,2, Yunn-Yi Chen1, Anthony Nasr3, Iwei Yeh1,2, Eric Talevich2, Courtney Onodera2, Boris C Bastian1,2, Joseph T Rabban1, Karuna Garg1, Charles Zaloudek1, David A Solomon1,2.
Abstract
Malignant mesothelioma is a rare cancer that arises from the mesothelial cells that line the pleural cavity and less commonly from the peritoneal lining of the abdomen and pelvis. Most pleural mesotheliomas arise in patients with a history of asbestos exposure, whereas the association of peritoneal mesotheliomas with exposure to asbestos and other potential carcinogens is less clear, suggesting that the genetic alterations that drive malignant peritoneal mesothelioma may be unique from those in pleural mesothelioma. Treatment options for all malignant mesotheliomas are currently limited, with no known targeted therapies available. To better understand the molecular pathogenesis of malignant peritoneal mesothelioma, we sequenced 510 cancer-related genes in 13 patients with malignant mesothelioma arising in the peritoneal cavity. The most frequent genetic alteration was biallelic inactivation of the BAP1 gene, which occurred in 9/13 cases, with an additional two cases demonstrating monoallelic loss of BAP1. All 11 of these cases demonstrated loss of BAP1 nuclear staining by immunohistochemistry, whereas two tumors without BAP1 alteration and all 42 cases of histologic mimics in peritoneum (8 multilocular peritoneal inclusion cyst, 6 well-differentiated papillary mesothelioma of the peritoneum, 16 adenomatoid tumor, and 12 low-grade serous carcinoma of the ovary) demonstrated intact BAP1 nuclear staining. Additional recurrently mutated genes in this cohort of malignant peritoneal mesotheliomas included NF2 (3/13), SETD2 (2/13), and DDX3X (2/13). While these genes are known to be recurrently mutated in pleural mesotheliomas, the frequencies are distinct in peritoneal mesotheliomas, with nearly 85% of peritoneal tumors harboring BAP1 alterations versus only 20-30% of pleural tumors. Together, these findings demonstrate the importance of epigenetic modifiers including BAP1, SETD2, and DDX3X in mesothelial tumorigenesis and suggest opportunities for targeted therapies.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27813512 PMCID: PMC5288276 DOI: 10.1038/modpathol.2016.188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mod Pathol ISSN: 0893-3952 Impact factor: 7.842
Clinical data for patients with malignant peritoneal mesothelioma.
| Patient | Age at dx | Sex | Year of dx | Presenting symptoms | Clinical outcome data |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MPM1 | 74 | F | 2009 | abdominal distention | diagnosed on paracentesis followed by hysterctomy/bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy/omentectomy/debulking, no follow-up |
| MPM2 | 89 | F | 2008 | bowel obstruction | diagnosed on bilateral oophorectomy/myomectomy/mesenteric biopsy, no follow-up available after surgery |
| MPM3 | 48 | F | 1996 | pelvic pain | initially underwent hysterectomy/bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy with atypical mesothelial proliferation, 7 months later |
| MPM4 | 47 | F | 2008 | vaginal bleeding | diagnosed on hysterectomy/bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy/omentectomy/debulking, metastatic disease to cervical lymph |
| MPM5 | 48 | M | 1993 | umbilical hernia | diagnosed on herniorrhaphy followed by debulking surgery, received adjuvant intraperitoneal chemotherapy, underwent |
| MPM6 | 54 | M | 2004 | abdominal distention | diagnosed on paracentesis, received 6 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with pemetrexed and cisplatin, then underwent |
| MPM7 | 67 | M | 1991 | abdominal wall mass | diagnosed on resection of mass and involved small bowel, no follow-up available after surgery |
| MPM8 | 55 | M | 2000 | abdominal distention | initially had five non-diagnostic paracentesis cytologic evaluations, diagnosed on laparoscopy with omental biopsy followed by |
| MPM9 | 62 | F | 2014 | pelvic mass | diagnosed on hysterectomy/bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy/omentectomy/colectomy, no follow-up available after surgery |
| MPM10 | 71 | M | 2002 | abdominal distention | diagnosed on omentectomy and debulking surgery, no follow-up available after surgery |
| MPM11 | 70 | F | 2014 | abdominal distention | diagnosed on laparoscopy with omental biopsy, no follow-up available after biopsy |
| MPM12 | 85 | F | 2006 | abdominal distention | diagnosed on hysterectomy/bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy/omental biopsy, no follow-up available after surgery |
| MPM13 | 19 | F | 2004 | abdominal distention | diagnosed on bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy/omentectomy/surgical debulking, received adjuvant chemotherapy with 4 |
Figure 1Genomic profiling results on 13 patients with malignant peritoneal mesothelioma. Patient age, sex, tumor histologic subtype, chromosome 3p status, BAP1 nuclear immunostaining results, pathogenic or likely pathogenic genetic alterations, and the quantity of chromosomal copy number aberrations are shown.
Figure 2Loss of nuclear BAP1 expression defines the majority of malignant peritoneal mesotheliomas arising within the abdomen and pelvis. (A-C) Absence of BAP1 immunostaining in a malignant mesothelioma arising in the abdomen/pelvis of a 70 year old woman (patient MPM11) with interstitial deletion of chromosome 3p encompassing the BAP1 locus, as well as an NF2 frameshift mutation. Retained BAP1 expression is seen in non-neoplastic stromal, inflammatory, and endothelial cells. (D-F) Absence of BAP1 immunostaining in a malignant mesothelioma arising in the abdomen/pelvis of a 67 year old man (patient MPM7) with focal homozygous deletion of a 300 kb segment on chromosome 3p encompassing the BAP1 locus. (G-I) Intact BAP1 immunostaining in a malignant mesothelioma arising in the abdomen/pelvis of a 19 year old woman (patient MPM13) with hotspot mutation in the TERT promoter, without chromosome 3p loss or BAP1 alteration.
BAP1 immunostaining results on malignant peritoneal mesotheliomas and histologic mimics in the peritoneum.
| Tumor type | Cases with loss of | Total number | % with |
|---|---|---|---|
| Malignant peritoneal mesothelioma | 11 | 13 | 85% |
| Ovarian low grade serous carcinoma | 0 | 12 | 0% |
| Well-differentiated papillary mesothelioma | 0 | 6 | 0% |
| Multilocular peritoneal inclusion cyst | 0 | 8 | 0% |
| Adenomatoid tumor | 0 | 16 | 0% |
Figure 3Intact BAP1 expression is uniformly present in benign mesothelial lesions and other histologic mimics of malignant mesothelioma in the peritoneum. (A-C) Intact BAP1 immunostaining in a well-differentiated papillary mesothelioma within the abdomen of a 67 year old woman who presented with gastric volvulus and was found to have peritoneal nodularity along the stomach and liver. (D-F) Intact BAP1 immunostaining in an 8 cm multilocular peritoneal inclusion cyst in the pelvic cavity of a 62 year old woman. (G-I) Intact BAP1 immunostaining in a 2 cm paratesticular adenomatoid tumor in a 43 year old man who underwent orchiectomy. (J-L) Intact BAP1 immunostaining in an ovarian low-grade serous carcinoma in an 83 year old woman with multiple metastatic deposits throughout the abdomen and pelvis.