| Literature DB >> 33912469 |
Pietro Parcesepe1, Luigi Coppola2, Andrea Remo3, Mario Rosario D'Andrea4, Giulia Coppola5, Michele Simbolo1,6, Erminia Manfrin1, Aldo Scarpa1,6, Elena De Santis7, Guido Giordano8.
Abstract
Malignant Brenner Tumor (mBT) is extremely rare. Although BT are almost exclusive ovarian neoplasms, they may constitute a highly unusual tumor of the testis; in fact, only seven fully documented cases have been reported to date. Because of their rarity, the pathogenesis of these tumors has not been clarified and there is no standard therapeutic approach. We report the first case of epididymal mBT with synchronous, multiple, liver metastases and a very dramatic clinical course. Both primary tumor and metastasis were subjected to mutational analysis of 20 cancer associated genes. Primary tumor showed FGFR3 Tyr375Cys and PIK3CA His1047Arg missense mutations. Both mutations are reported as pathogenic in ClinVar database. The same FGFR3 mutation was present in liver metastasis. Based on these results we believe that the FGFR pathway could be an ideal candidate for personalized treatment, offering hope to a subset of patients with mBT. Personalized approach, including mutational analysis and molecular testing should be required in patients with rare tumors in order to clarify diagnosis and improve therapeutic strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Brenner tumor; FGFR; case report; epididymis; liver metastases; malignant; mutations; testis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33912469 PMCID: PMC8072450 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.663489
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1mBT tissue stained with H&E. (A) Neoplatic cells resembling invasive urothelial carcinoma exhibit high mitotic activity (H&E, x10 magnification). (B) Perineural (head arrow) infiltration (x20 magnification). (C) Linfovascular invasion (x40 magnification). (D) Testis showing tubular atrophy and Leydig cells hyperplasia (x10 magnification).
Figure 2Immunohistochemical analysis on mBT tissue sections (A) Testicular lesion showing several dilated cystic-like areas (H&E; x20 magnification). Immunohistochemical staining of tumor tissue showing intense and diffuse immunopositivity for CK7 (x20) (B) and EMA (x20) (C). Tumor tissue was CK20 negative (x20) (D).
Genetic mutations and their possible predictive impact.
| Site | Chrom | POS | REF | ALT | Gene | Consequence | HGVSp | Clin sig |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | 4 | 1806099 | A | G |
| missense_variant | NP_001156685.1:p.Tyr375Cys | P |
| Primary | 3 | 178952085 | A | G |
| missense_variant | NP_006209.2:p.His1047Arg | P |
| Metastasis | 4 | 1806099 | A | G |
| missense_variant | NP_001156685.1:p.Tyr375Cys | P |
Chrom, Chromosome; POS, Position; REF, Reference; Pri, Primary tumor; Met, Metastatic Tumor; A, Adenosine; ALT, Alteration; G, Guanine; HGVSp, Human Genome Variation Society Protein; Tyr, Tyrosine; Cys, Cysteine; His, Histidine; Arg, Arginine; PD, Possible Damaging; P, Pathogenic.
Overview on Testicular/paratesticular and epididymal BT published in literature.
| Authors, year(Ref) | Age (years) | ClinicalPresentation | Location | Size (cm) | Histology | Treatment | Survival (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caccamo et al. ( | 62 | NR | T and E | NR | BT | NR | NR |
| Goldman ( | 41 | Intermittent aching sensation and tender mass | Left T | 2.7x2.2x2.0 | BT | S | 36 |
| Nogales et al., ( | 37 | Cystic mass | T | 3 | Mixed BTadenomatoid tumor | S | NR |
| Ross et al. ( | 61 | Diabetes, cardiovascular complications | Paratesticular | 0,6 | BT | NR | NR |
| Vechinski et al. ( | 67 | Inguinal hernia, swelling of the scrotum | T | 7.3 | BT | S | 96 |
| Quan et al. ( | 55 | Swelling and headiness of right T | T | 6,5 x 4 x 3,5 | BT | S | 29 |
| Jones et al. ( | 60 | Scrotal infection | T | 0,7 | BT | S | NR |
| Parcesepe et al., 2021 | 78 | Left T mass | Left T and E | 2,5 | mBT | S | 4 (dead) |
NR, not-reported; T, testis; E. epididymis; BT, Brenner Tumor; mBT, malignant Brenner Tumor; S, Surgery (orchiectomy).