| Literature DB >> 33796464 |
Maria A Pantaleo1,2, Marcella Mandruzzato1, Valentina Indio2, Milena Urbini3, Margherita Nannini1, Lidia Gatto1, Angela Schipani2, Michelangelo Fiorentino4, Tania Franceschini4, Valentina Ambrosini5, Valerio Di Scioscio6, Maristella Saponara1, Manuela Ianni2, Sergio Concetti7, Annalisa Altimari8, Andrea Ardizzoni1,2, Annalisa Astolfi9.
Abstract
Somatic malignant transformation in a germ cell tumor (GCT) is the development of non-germ malignancies; much of available literature refers to teratoma with malignant transformation (TMT). There are various transformation histologies such as sarcoma, adenocarcinoma, primitive neuroectodermal tumors, and more rarely carcinoid tumors, hemangioendothelioma, lymphoma, or nephroblastoma. The treatments of these entities include surgery and/or chemotherapy. A standard approach in choosing chemotherapy in TMT cases has not yet been established. Many authors suggest using chemotherapeutic agents based on the transformed histology, while others recommend GCT-oriented therapy combined with surgery as the primary treatment, reserving histology-driven chemotherapies for metastatic relapse. We report the clinical findings and the genomic profile of a mixed GCT case with somatic-type malignancy of sarcoma type. We achieved a complete radiological response with GCT-oriented chemotherapy performed as salvage therapy after sarcoma-histology therapy. In addition, molecular profiles with RNA-sequencing and exome sequencing analyses of the primary tumor and the tumor with somatic-type malignancy of sarcoma type were explored.Entities:
Keywords: PEB; RNA-sequencing; exome sequencing; germ cell tumor; sarcoma; teratoma with malignant transformation
Year: 2021 PMID: 33796464 PMCID: PMC8008106 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.633543
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Histological features of germ-cell tumor (seminoma) with somatic malignant transformation (spindle cell sarcoma) (A) Classic seminoma (upper right corner) associated with spindle cell sarcoma (lower left corner), (H&E 200x). (B) in situ germ cell neoplasia (upper right corner) admixed with somatic spindle cell sarcoma (lower left corner), (H&E 200x). (C) Metastatic spindle cell sarcoma within the spermatic cord (H&E 200x). (D) The same field of picture C shows high proliferative Ki67 index (DAB 200x).
Figure 218F-FDG PET/CT MIP and corresponding trans-axial images obtained at staging. (A) December 2016 before sarcoma therapy; (B) March 2017 after sarcoma therapy; (C) May 2017 early evaluation after two cycles of chemotherapy for GCT testicular cancer; (D) July 2017 at completion of GCT testicular cancer chemotherapy. Hypermetabolic left external iliac nodes (A, white arrow) show only slight decrease of uptake after sarcoma chemotherapy (B, white arrow) while they turn FDG-negative after chemotherapy for testicular cancer, respectively, after 2 cycles (C, white arrow) and 4 cycles (D, white arrow). Note bone marrow rebound after chemotherapy in B.
Figure 3Diagnostic CT corresponding images at diagnosis and at therapy completion in (A,B), respectively.
Figure 4Figure showcasing a timeline with relevant data of the clinical history of patient.
Figure 5Principal component analysis of seminoma, mixed germ cell tumors and sarcoma publicly available in The Cancer Genome Atlas project (TCGA) and our primary tumor and relapse in sarcoma.