| Literature DB >> 31676785 |
Monika Vyas1, Jaclyn F Hechtman1, Yanming Zhang1, Ryma Benayed1, Aslihan Yavas1, Gokce Askan1, Jinru Shia1, David S Klimstra1, Olca Basturk2.
Abstract
Recently discovered DNAJB1-PRKACA oncogenic fusions have been considered diagnostic for fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma. In this study, we describe six pancreatobiliary neoplasms with PRKACA fusions, five of which harbor the DNAJB1-PRKACA fusion. All neoplasms were subjected to a hybridization capture-based next-generation sequencing assay (MSK-IMPACT), which enables the identification of sequence mutations, copy number alterations, and selected structural rearrangements involving ≥410 genes (n = 6) and/or to a custom targeted, RNA-based panel (MSK-Fusion) that utilizes Archer Anchored Multiplex PCR technology and next-generation sequencing to detect gene fusions in 62 genes (n = 2). Selected neoplasms also underwent FISH analysis, albumin mRNA in-situ hybridization, and arginase-1 immunohistochemical labeling (n = 3). Five neoplasms were pancreatic, and one arose in the intrahepatic bile ducts. All revealed at least focal oncocytic morphology: three cases were diagnosed as intraductal oncocytic papillary neoplasms, and three as intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasms with mixed oncocytic and pancreatobiliary or gastric features. Four cases had an invasive carcinoma component composed of oncocytic cells. Five cases revealed DNAJB1-PRKACA fusions and one revealed an ATP1B1-PRKACA fusion. None of the cases tested were positive for albumin or arginase-1. Our data prove that DNAJB1-PRKACA fusion is neither exclusive nor diagnostic for fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma, and caution should be exercised in diagnosing liver tumors with DNAJB1-PRKACA fusions as fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma, particularly if a pancreatic lesion is present. Moreover, considering DNAJB1-PRKACA fusions lead to upregulated protein kinase activity and that this upregulated protein kinase activity has a significant role in tumorigenesis of fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma, protein kinase inhibition could have therapeutic potential in the treatment of these pancreatobiliary neoplasms as well, once a suitable drug is developed.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31676785 PMCID: PMC7125037 DOI: 10.1038/s41379-019-0398-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mod Pathol ISSN: 0893-3952 Impact factor: 7.842
Clinicopathologic Features of the Pancreatobiliary Neoplasms with PRKACA Fusions
| Case | Age/Sex | Initial Presentation | Pathology Diagnosis | Clinical Follow-up | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intraductal Component | Invasive Component | Metastasis | ||||
| 63/M | 7 cm mass in head of the pancreas | IOPN | Invasive adenocarcinoma with mucinous and oncocytic features | Not applicable | No follow up data available | |
| 47/M | 10 cm cystic mass in caudate lobe of liver | IOPN of the bile ducts | Invasive adenocarcinoma with oncocytic features | Not applicable | Recurrence after 4 years; now deceased | |
| 36/M | 4.5 cm cystic mass in head of the pancreas | IOPN | Not applicable | Not applicable | No evidence of disease for 10 years | |
| 58/F | Complex cystic mass in head of the pancreas | IPMN, mixed oncocytic and pancreatobiliary features | Minute focus of invasion with mucinous and oncocytic features | Not applicable | No adjuvant therapy given. No evidence of disease for 9 months | |
| 52/M | 2.8 cm cystic mass in head of the pancreas | IPMN, mixed oncocytic and gastric features | Not applicable | Not applicable | No evidence of disease for 6 years | |
| 76/M | Distal pancreatic mass | IPMN, mixed oncocytic and pancreatobiliary features | Invasive adenocarcinoma | Metastatic adenocarcinoma with oncocytic features, involving liver | Recurrence and liver metastases after 20 years, disease progression despite chemotherapy | |
IOPN: Intraductal oncocytic papillary neoplasm; IPMN: Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm
Figure 1:A-B. Intraductal oncocytic papillary neoplasms exhibited papillary architecture with distinct oncocytic cytology and intracytoplasmic lumens. C. If present, invasive component revealed stromal mucin accumulation in which the neoplastic cells were suspended (Case 1 is depicted here).
Figure 2:Three pancreatic neoplasms demonstrated mixed features, Case 5 with mixed oncocytic and gastric features is shown here.
Figure 3:Albumin mRNA by in-situ hybridization was positive in two pancreatic intraductal oncocytic papillary neoplasms (none of these cases had DNAJB1-PRKACA fusions).
Figure 4:OncoPrint diagram of types of genetic alterations seen in our cases.
Figure 5:Schematic representations of PRKACA fusions detected by the MSK-Fusion targeted RNASeq assay. A. DNAJB1-PRKACA in-frame fusion resulting from a 400 Kb deletion on chromosome 19 and joining exon1 of DNAJB1 (NM_006145) to exons 2-10 of PRKACA (NM_002730). B. ATP1B1-PRKACA fusion derived from a translocation between chromosome 1 and chromosome 19. This in-frame fusion event involves exon 1 of ATP1B1 (NM_001677) and exons 2-10 of PRKACA (NM_002730). The chimeric transcript sequence and its corresponding protein sequence are indicated under the fusion breakpoint region. +/− indicate the direction of transcription of each gene.
Molecular Features of PRKACA Rearranged Pancreatobiliary Neoplasms
| Case | Diagnosis | Test | Partner Gene (5’) | Kinase Gene (3’) | Predicted Fusion | Other Genomic Mutations / Alterations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IOPN with invasion | MSK-Fusion | Protein fusion: in frame ( | ||||
| Biliary IOPN with invasion | MSK-IMPACT & FISH | Protein fusion: in frame ( | ||||
| IOPN | MSK-IMPACT & FISH | Transcript fusion ( | ||||
| IPMN, mixed oncocytic and pancreatobiliary features, with invasion | MSK-IMPACT | Protein fusion: in frame ( | ||||
| IPMN, mixed oncocytic and gastric features | MSK-IMPACT & FISH | Protein fusion: mid-exon ( | ||||
| IPMN with mixed oncocytic and pancreatobiliary features, with invasion | MSK-IMPACT | Protein fusion: in frame ( |
IOPN: Intraductal oncocytic papillary neoplasm; IPMN: Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm
Figure 6:FISH analysis using PRKACA break-apart probes reveals a complete loss of the 5’PRKACA signal (labeled in red) in most cells, indicative of an interstitial deletion of the 5’ upstream region between the PRKACA and DNAJB1 at 19p13.12.