| Literature DB >> 31792767 |
J A Hol1, M C J Jongmans2,3, A S Littooij2,4, R R de Krijger2,5, R P Kuiper2, J J T van Harssel3, A Mensenkamp6, M Simons7, G A M Tytgat2, M M van den Heuvel-Eibrink2, M van Grotel2.
Abstract
Hereditary Leiomyomatosis and Renal Cell Cancer (HLRCC) is an autosomal dominant syndrome caused by heterozygous pathogenic germline variants in the fumarate hydratase (FH) gene. It is characterized by cutaneous and uterine leiomyomas and an increased risk of developing renal cell carcinoma (RCC), which is usually adult-onset. HLRCC-related RCC tends to be aggressive and can metastasize even when the primary tumor is small. Data on children and adolescents are scarce. Herein, we report two patients from unrelated Dutch families, with HLRCC-related RCC at the ages of 15 and 18 years, and a third patient with an FH mutation and complex renal cysts at the age of 13. Both RCC's were localized and successfully resected, and careful MRI surveillance was initiated to monitor the renal cysts. One of the patients with RCC subsequently developed an ovarian Leydig cell tumor. A review of the literature identified 10 previously reported cases of HLRCC-related RCC in patients aged younger than 20 years, five of them presenting with metastatic disease. These data emphasize the importance of recognizing HLRCC in young patients to enable early detection of RCC, albeit rare. They support the recommendations from the 2014 consensus guideline, in which genetic testing for FH mutations, and renal MRI surveillance, is advised for HLRCC family members from the age of 8-10 years onwards.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; Children; FH mutation; Fumarate hydratase; HLRCC; Hereditary leiomyomatosis; Renal cell carcinoma
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31792767 PMCID: PMC7026215 DOI: 10.1007/s10689-019-00155-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fam Cancer ISSN: 1389-9600 Impact factor: 2.375
Fig. 1Case 1 (female, 15 years, renal cell carcinoma and Leydig cell tumor): a family pedigree; b–c contrast-enhanced T1W-MRI (b) and abdominal T2W-MRI (c) showing large right-sided kidney mass, which is mostly cystic with peripheral solid nodules (boxes). In the left kidney, multiple cystic lesions (arrows) are observed without solid components; d–f histology of the renal tumor: vital epithelial tumor with a predominantly tubular, partially papillary growth pattern (d) of strongly eosinophilic cells with mild to moderate nuclear atypia (e), and diffuse 2SC staining (f). g T2W-MRI of the pelvic region showing a right-sided ovarian lesion (box) with both solid and cystic components. h Ovarian Leydig cell tumor showing diffuse 2SC staining
Scan parameters and surveillance schedule for renal MRI surveillance in patients with HLRCC
| Parameter | T2w-fat suppression | 3D-T2 | DWI | T1 pre/post |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pulse sequence | 2-D MultiVane with spectral fat saturation | 3-D turbo spin-echo with variable flip angle | 2-D single-shot spin-echo with spectral fat saturation | 2-D ultrafast spoiled gradient echo with fat suppression |
| Repetition time (ms) | 2450 | 449 | 1611 | 3,89 |
| Echo time (ms) | 100 | 90 | 79 | 1,82 |
| Flip angle (degree) | 90 | – | 90 | 10 |
| Slice orientation | axial | axial | axial | axial |
| Slice thickness (mm) | 3 | 0.9–1.15 | 5 | 4 |
| Slice gap (mm) | 3 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Echotrain length | 30 | 85 | 1 | 1 |
| Field of view (mm2) | 400 | 400 | 450 | 380 |
| B-values (s/mm2) | – | – | 0, 150, 1000 | – |
Fig. 2Case 2 (female, 18 years, renal cell carcinoma): a family pedigree; data are missing on the presence of leiomyomas in FH mutation carriers; b abdominal CT after contrast administration, showing a 9 mm cystic lesion in the left kidney, with an area of increased density (arrow) suspect for nodular enhancement. c Tumor cells showing diffuse 2SC staining
Fig. 3Case 3 (female, 13 years, complex renal cysts): a family pedigree; b–d abdominal T1 MRI (b) showing multilocular cysts (box) in the right kidney with area suspect for hemorrhagic content (arrow). Abdominal T2W MRI (c) and subtraction MRI (d) showing no nodular enhancement
HLRCC-related renal cell carcinoma (RCC) before the age of 20 years (confirmed FH mutation)
| # | References | Age | Sex | Presentation | Histology | Disease stage | Outcome (FU) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Alam et al. [ | n.a. | 16 | F | Symptomatic | Collecting duct tumour | Metastatic | Died (2 years) |
| 2 | Merino et al. [ | n.a. | 17 | F | HLRCC-associated RCC | Localized | ||
| 3 | 18 | F | Metastatic | |||||
| 4 | Al Refae et al. [ | c.1293del (exon 8) | 17 | M | Symptomatic | Papillary type 2 RCC | Metastatic | Died (15 months) |
| 5 | Alrashdi et al. [ | c.1189G>A (exon 8) | 11 | M | Surveillance | Papillary type 2 RCC | Localized | NED (3 years) |
| 6 | Gardie et al. [ | c.1123del (exon 8) | 17 | M | Papillary type 2 RCC | Metastatic | Died (2 years) | |
| 7 | Van Spaendonck-Zwarts et al. [ | c.1002T>G (exon 7) | 18 | F | Symptomatic | Papillary type 2 RCC, focally showing prominent nucleoli surrounded by a clear halo | Metastatic | Died (8 months) |
| 8 | Nix et al. [ ( | n.a. | 10 | RCC, not specified | ||||
| 9 | Toubaji et al. [ ( | n.a. | 18 | RCC, not specified | ||||
| 10 | Bhola et al. [ | c.1430-1437dup (exon 10) | 15 | F | Symptomatic | Tubulo-papillary carcinoma | ||
| 11 | This report | Whole gene deletion | 15 | F | Symptomatic | HLRCC-associated RCC | Localized | Second tumor (Leydig cell tumor), 2 years after initial diagnosis |
| 12 | This report | c.1210G>T (exon 8) | 18 | F | Surveillance | HLRCC-associated RCC | Localized | NED (4 years) |
Mutations are described using NM_000143.3
FU follow-up time since diagnosis, NED no evidence of disease, n.a. not available
aPreviously included in literature review by Van Spaendonck-Zwarts et al. [23]
bFollow-up data reported in Van Spaendonck-Zwarts et al. [23]
cFollow-up data reported in Van Spaendonck-Zwarts et al. [23] and Wong et al. [28]
dThis 10-year old patient is also referred to in Menko et al. [14] (describes personal communication with Dr. Linehan)
Box 1
| Recommended schedule for renal surveillance in | |
|---|---|
| Yearly MRI scans from the age of 8–10 years onwards | |
| If renal cysts are detected, closer monitoring is indicated: | |
| 1st year: at 3, 6 and 12 months after detection of cysts, if no solid nodules appear: | |
| 2nd–4th year: every 6 months, if no solid nodules appear: | |
| 5th year and onwards: yearly MRI scans | |
| If solid nodules are detected, perform brain MRI and total body FDG-positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) for staging (repeat 1 × after 3 months) | |
| References: Menko et al. [ |