| Literature DB >> 29914578 |
Evidio Domingo-Musibay1,2, Paari Murugan3,4, Alessio Giubellino3,4, Sandeep Sharma5, Daniel Steinberger5, Jianling Yuan6,4, Matthew A Hunt7,4, Emil Lou8,4, Jeffrey S Miller8,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sebaceous carcinoma is an aggressive adnexal skin tumor with a predilection for the eyelids and sebaceous glands of the head and neck. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Anti-PD1; Immunotherapy; Pembrolizumab; Sebaceous carcinoma; Skin cancer5
Year: 2018 PMID: 29914578 PMCID: PMC6006706 DOI: 10.1186/s40425-018-0357-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunother Cancer ISSN: 2051-1426 Impact factor: 13.751
Fig. 1Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) brain: T1-weighted images following intravenous gadolinium-based contrast (top panel) and axial FLAIR images without contrast (bottom panel). MRI brain images taken at initial presentation show two large frontal lobe enhancing lesions at the gray-white matter junction with significant surrounding edema and associated T2 FLAIR hyperintensity. Post-treatment changes remain evident at 6 and 12 month follow-up scans
Fig. 2Sebaceous carcinoma: Sheets of malignant cells are shown invading subcutaneous adipose tissue along with tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (lower right) (a). Malignant epithelial cells with nuclear pleomorphism, coarse chromatin, prominent nucleoli and increased mitotic activity (b). Carcinoma with stromal desmoplasia and tumor necrosis (c). Intracytoplasmic vacuolations suggest sebaceous differentiation (d). Carcinoma exhibiting lymphovascular space invasion (e). Adipophilin immunohistochemistry demonstrating diffuse (f) and characteristic strong membranous staining of the intracytoplasmic lipid vacuoles (g). PD-L1 (22C3, pharm Dx) immunohistochemistry showing positive (high, tumor proportion score > 50%) expression in 100% of tumor cells (h)
Tumor genomic next generation sequencing (NGS) study reveals mutations in several genes, including somatic mutations in genes mutated in the sebaceous carcinoma COSMIC dataset (in bold)
| Gene | Alteration | Subcellular localization | Pathway |
|---|---|---|---|
| LRP1B | G3156C, Q1125* | Plasma membrane | Receptor mediated endocytosis |
| CCND1 | S41L | Nucleus; cytosol | Cyclin D1, cell cycle |
|
| P174H | Nucleoplasm | DNA demethylation |
|
| rearrangement, del exon 10-11 | Nucleoplasm | DNA repair |
| FANCA | A816V, R685S | Nucleus | DNA repair |
| FGF6 | A63T | Extracellular | Growth factor |
| MYST3 | Q1681_Q1684del | Nucleolus; cytosol | Histone acetyltransferase (HAT) |
|
| G12C | Cytosol | MAPK signalling |
| RBM10 | F173fs*7 | Nucleus | mRNA splicing |
|
| amplification | Plasma membrane | Receptor tyrosine kinase |
|
| I539del | Endoplasmic reticulum | Receptor tyrosine kinase |
| FLT4 | K520E, R658W | Nucleus; plasma membrane | Receptor tyrosine kinase |
| ROS1 | N692H | Vesicles | Receptor tyrosine kinase |
| TERT | -124C>T | Nucleoplasm | Telomerase |
| WT1 | R471S | Nucleoplasm | WT1 Transcription Factor |
| MYC | L435F | Nucleoplasm | MYC Transcription Factor |
| ZNF703 | G406R | Nucleus | Transcriptional co-repressor |
| c11orf30 | C1211S | Nucleoplasm | Trascriptional Repressor |
| FLCN | R320Q | Nucleus; cytosol | Tumor suppressor |
|
| R706Q | Cytosol | Ubiquitination |
*denotes mutations causing a premature stop codon
fs denotes the presence of a frameshift mutation
Fig. 3Positron emission tomography (PET) maximum intensity projection (MIP) images and axial images from the chest, abdomen, and pelvis demonstrating the radiographic response to pembrolizumab therapy. a Baseline imaging shows extensive metastatic disease burden, and green arrows highlight lesions first to improve in lung, mediastinum, and axillary lymph nodes. b Imaging after 3 months (4 cycles) of pembrolizumab are consistent with mixed response and pseudoprogression, with several new hypermetabolic foci (red arrows) in soft tissue, liver and bone. c Imaging studies at 6 months shows a near complete response to 7 cycles of pembrolizumab, with regression of multiple hypermetabolic metastatic foci, and few small remaining foci of residual hypermetabolism in the chest and abdomen. d Imaging at 12 months shows persistent FDG avidity in mediastinal and abdominal lymph nodes and new FDG avid lesions in liver and small bowel (red arrows)
Fig. 4Peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) phenotyping at 6-month (24 week) follow-up visit. a Dot plots show lymphocyte gating and the relative frequency of CD3-CD56+ NK cells and CD3+ T cells. b Dot plots show relative frequency of CD4 + CD45RA- memory T cells expressing CCR7 and CD27, and CD127lo CD25+ regulatory T cells. c Dot plots of CD3 + CD8+ gated cells show that CD45RA-CD8+ T cells stain for memory markers CCR7 and CD27, and there are smaller populations of CD45RA + CCR7- and CD45RA + CD27- effector T cells. d NK cells are mature (CD56 dim), terminally differentiated (CD57+) and express the Fc-gamma receptor, CD16. Numbers inside dot plots indicate the percentage of cells for the markers analyzed