| Literature DB >> 33907694 |
Ragheed Saoud1, Thomas H Sanford2, Stephen M Hewitt3, Andrea B Apolo3, Piyush K Agarwal1.
Abstract
We present a case of a 69-year-old male patient diagnosed with high grade (T1 HG) urothelial carcinoma of the bladder who progressed rapidly towards muscle invasive disease and eventually death despite neoadjuvant chemotherapy and radical cystectomy. We postulate that this may be due to a deleterious underlying somatic gene mutation. Molecular pathologic data obtained on the initial, non-muscle invasive tumor and the final cystectomy specimen, revealed the same TP53 mutation (p.Arg110Pro) in both specimens with a variant allele frequency of 44%. The tumor was tested for 50 common gene mutations in urothelial carcinoma and no other identifiable DNA repair mutations were found, suggesting that this specific TP53 aberration, one that has never been reported in the bladder cancer literature, could be particularly deleterious. Knowing that bladder cancer cell lines that lack TP53 are more resistant to cisplatin and because the tumor lacked any other DNA mutation, this patient may have been a candidate for upfront surgery without neoadjuvant chemotherapy. In addition to histological analysis of the tumor, early molecular and cytogenetic characterization of resected tissue is essential in predicting progression and eventual prognosis of the disease based on identifiable gene mutations. Further comparative prospective studies are required to clarify the importance of molecular heterogeneity and subtyping in bladder cancer.Entities:
Keywords: invasive; mismatch repair gene; missense mutation
Year: 2021 PMID: 33907694 PMCID: PMC8068478 DOI: 10.2147/RRU.S288948
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res Rep Urol ISSN: 2253-2447
Figure 1Axial (A) and coronal (B) CT scans of the abdomen showing abdominal ascites and dilated bowel loops due to obstruction from peritoneal carcinomatosis.
Figure 2PET NaF showing focal abnormal uptake at (A) the left parietal-temporal skull and (B) the left 6th rib both suspicious for metastatic disease.
Figure 3(A–F) Metastatic urothelial carcinoma to the (A) diaphragm (B) small bowel, (C) liver (H&E stain, original magnification 200x), (D) lung (original magnification 100x), (E) gallbladder (original magnification 40x), and (F) bone marrow (original magnification 200x).