| Literature DB >> 31822803 |
Kiyong Na1,2, Juan C Hernandez-Prera3, Jae-Yol Lim4, Ha Young Woo1, Sun Och Yoon5,6.
Abstract
Secretory carcinoma is a salivary gland tumor with a characteristic chromosomal translocation that results in an ETV6-NTRK3 fusion gene. Secretory carcinoma shows relatively frequent rates of lymph-node metastasis and tumor recurrence and has a characteristic histology. Except for the ETV6 translocation, genomic alterations in secretory carcinoma have not been reported. In the present study, we characterized the novel recurrent genetic mutations of secretory carcinoma. On the basis of histology, immunohistochemistry, and ETV6 gene break-apart fluorescence in situ hybridization assays, 22 tumors were classified as secretory carcinomas (19 ETV6 translocation-positive and 3 ETV6 translocation-negative secretory carcinomas) and their clinicopathologic characteristics were reviewed. Targeted deep sequencing analyses were performed on 20 secretory carcinomas (17 ETV6 translocation-positive and 3 ETV6 translocation-negative secretory carcinomas) to investigate their genetic alterations. The A16V (C→T) mutation in PRSS1, which encodes a cationic trypsinogen and has a mutation associated with hereditary pancreatitis and pancreatic adenocarcinoma, was observed in 40% (8/20) (7/17 of ETV6 translocation-positive and 1/3 of ETV6 translocation-negative secretory carcinomas). Pathogenic variants of MLH1, MUTYH, and STK11 were also identified. Variants of uncertain significance included mutations in KMT5A. These novel characteristic genetic alterations may advance current understandings of secretory carcinoma tumorigenesis and progression, leading to improved diagnoses and treatment strategies.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31822803 PMCID: PMC7113190 DOI: 10.1038/s41379-019-0427-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mod Pathol ISSN: 0893-3952 Impact factor: 7.842
Fig. 1Histopathological features of secretory carcinoma.
Tumors frequently show papillary cystic (a) and microcystic (b) growth architectures. The tumor cells show low-grade uniform nuclei, occasional small nucleoli, and pinkish bubbly cytoplasm (c). Mucin-like and/or eosinophilic secretions are easily detected in tumors with microcystic growth patterns (b, d). The tumors showed expression of S100 (e) and mammaglobin (f) and no expression of DOG1 (g). An ETV6 break-apart FISH assay showed a split of one red signal and one green signal per nucleus, indicative of ETV6 translocation (H: yellow arrow) with a fusion signal (H: gray arrow). The images in A through G were captured at ×100 and ×400 magnification.
Fig. 2Histologic features of acinic cell carcinoma and ETV6 translocation-negative secretory carcinoma.
Features of typical acinic cell carcinoma or blue dot tumor (a). Microcystic acinic cell carcinoma showing focal zymogen granule-containing cells (b). The tumor stroma is sometimes lymphocyte predominant (c). Typical immunohistochemistry of acinic cell carcinoma showing DOG1 positivity (d). A case of ETV6 translocation-negative secretory carcinoma showing microcystic architecture without definite zymogen granules (E) and diffuse staining for S100 (f) and mammaglobin (g). The tumor shows an intact ETV6 gene by FISH. Most tumor nuclei show intact fusions (h, red and green signals; gray arrows). This case showed STK11 gene mutation. Another case of ETV6 translocation-negative secretory carcinoma showing microcystic architecture (i). This case revealed no remarkable genetic alteration. Another ETV6 translocation-negative secretory carcinoma showing variegated architectures of predominantly papillary cystic, partly microcystic architecture, and focally solid growth patterns (j–l). This case showed PRSS1 mutation. The tumor cells of those three ETV6 translocation-negative secretory carcinomas showed low-grade uniform nuclei, occasional small nucleoli, and pinkish bubbly cytoplasm (e, i–k). Mucin-like and/or eosinophilic secretions are easily detected in tumors with microcystic growth patterns (e, i, k). Further features of the three cases of ETV6 translocation-negative secretory carcinoma are summarized in Supplementary Fig. 3.
Histologic features of secretory carcinoma.
| Variables | Secretory carcinoma ( | Acinic cell carcinoma ( |
|---|---|---|
| Gross appearance | ||
| Single-round | 15 (68%) | 16 (44%) |
| Multi-lobulated | 7 (32%) | 20 (56%) |
| Tumor border | ||
| Pushing | 14 (64%) | 25 (69%) |
| Infiltrative | 8 (36%) | 11 (31%) |
| Dominant growth pattern | ||
| Solid | 0 (0%) | 29 (81%) |
| Microcystic | 6 (27%) | 7 (19%) |
| Papillary cystic | 14 (64%) | 0 (0%) |
| Cribrifrom | 2 (9%) | 0 (0%) |
| Tumor stroma | ||
| Sclerosis | 22 (100%) | 31 (86%) |
| Lymphocyte-rich | 0 (0%) | 5 (14%) |
| Zymogen granule | ||
| Prominent | 0 (0%) | 30 (83%) |
| Focally present | 0 (0%) | 6 (17%) |
| Absent | 22 (100%) | 0 (0%) |
| Lymphovascular invasion | 0 (0%) | 2 (6%) |
| Perineural invasion | 2 (9%) | 4 (11%) |
| Immunohistochemistry | ||
| DOG1 expression | 2 (9%; focal) | 36 (100%; 36 diffuse) |
| S100 expression | 22 (100%; 21 diffuse and 1 focal) | 0 (0%) |
| Mammaglobin expression | 20 (91%; 17 diffuse and 3 focal) | 0 (0%) |
| P63 expression | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Translocated | 19 (86%) | Not done |
| Not translocated | 3 (14%) | |
Clinicopathologic features and clinical outcomes of secretory carcinoma.
| Variables | Secretory carcinoma ( | Acinic cell carcinoma ( |
|---|---|---|
| Median age (year) | 34 (mean, 36.5; range, 6–78) | 34 (mean, 37.9; range, 14–68) |
| Male: Female | 14:8 | 14:22 |
| Anatomical distribution | ||
| Parotid gland | 20 (91%)a | 35 (97%) |
| Minor salivary gland | 1 (5%)a | 1 (3%) |
| Submandibular gland | 1 (5%)a | 0 |
| Median tumor size (cm) | 2.2 (mean, 2.3; range: 1.1–3.8) | 2.7 (mean, 2.5; range, 1.0–5.2) |
| Surgery | ||
| Superficial parotidectomy | 13 (59%) | 22 (61%) |
| Total parotidectomy | 7 (32%) | 13 (36%) |
| Mass excision | 2 (9%) | 1 (3%) |
| Lymph-node dissection | ||
| Performed | 11 (50%) | 5 (14%) |
| Not performed | 11 (50%) | 31 (86%) |
| Nodal metastasisb | 4 out of 11 | 0 out of 5 |
| Resection margin involvement | 2 (9%) | 3 (8%) |
| American Joint Committee on Cancer tumor stage | ||
| I (T1N0) | 3 (14%)c | 12 (33%)b |
| II (T2N0) | 14 (64%)c | 21 (58%)b |
| III (T3 or N1) | 5 (23%)c | 3 (8%)b |
| Post operative radiation therapy | 8 (36%) | 5 (14%) |
| Median follow-up period (mo) | 46 (mean, 53.8; range, 6–140) | 48 (mean, 58.5; range, 6–180) |
| Overall recurrence | 7 (32%) | 5 (14%) |
| Recurrence site | ||
| Local | 5 | 3 |
| Nodal | 1 | 0 |
| Local and nodal | 1 | 2 |
| Median recurrence interval (mo) | 24 (mean, 24.5; range: 6–51) | 48 (mean, 46; range: 12–96) |
| Mean disease-free survival (mo) | 99 (95% CI, 74–123) | 153 (95% CI, 128–177) |
| 3-year recurrence ratee | 5/18 (28%) | 2/26 (8%) |
| 5-year recurrence ratee | 7/16 (44%) | 4/17 (24%) |
| Died of disease | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
aThe percentages before rounding are 90.9%, 4.5%, and 4.5%, respectively
bLymph-node metastasis was known only among cases undergoing lymph node dissection. To avoid overestimation, the percentage was not presented in this table
cThe percentages before rounding are 13.6%, 63.6%, and 22.7%, respectively. In 11 patients without node dissection, clinical N stage was considered as cN0
dThe percentages before rounding are 33.33%, 58.33%, and 8.33%, respectively
eThree-year and five-year follow-up data were available for 18 and 16 patients with secretory carcinoma, respectively; and 26 and 17 patients with acinic cell carcinoma, respectively
Fig. 3Landscape of the genetic alterations identified by the targeted deep sequencing analysis for 20 secretory carcinomas.
Fig. 4The genetic alteration status between the case group with aggressive clinicopathologic features, such as tumor recurrence, lymph node, and/or advanced American Joint Committee on Cancer stage III, and the case group of indolent features showing no evidence of tumor recurrence, lymph node metastasis, or advanced American Joint Committee on Cancer stage III.