| Literature DB >> 34888235 |
Stefan Stojanoski1,2, Henning Bünsow Boldt3,4, Dusko Kozic1,2, Attila Patócs5, Márta Korbonits6,7, Milica Medic-Stojanoska1,8, Olivera Casar-Borota9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Paraganglioma occurs rarely in the sellar/parasellar region. Here, we report a patient with malignant paraganglioma with primary sellar location with unusual genetic and imaging features. CASEEntities:
Keywords: 68Ga-DOTANOC PET/CT; ATRX mutations; MRI; TP53 mutations; malignant sellar paraganglioma
Year: 2021 PMID: 34888235 PMCID: PMC8650633 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.739255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Preoperative T2W coronal (A) and T1W coronal image after contrast administration (B) showing large sellar mass with bilateral parasellar involvement more prominent on the left, with partial encasement of the internal carotid artery with preserved flow void within the vessel (white arrows). Postoperative T1W coronal (C) and T2W (D) showing the reduction of the tumor volume in the sella and no significant changes in the parasellar components of the residual tumor.
Figure 2T2W coronal (A), T1W coronal (B), and T1W axial (C) after contrast administration showing size increase of the left cavernous sinus residual tumor with mass effect to the left temporal lobe and signs of subcortical vasogenic edema were evident (white arrows). Tumor extension to the left orbit through the orbital fissure was documented (black arrow).
Figure 3Hematoxylin–eosin staining revealed tumor composed of lobuli of uniform tumor cells surrounded by fibrous septa (A) with the evidence of invasion into surrounding brain parenchyma (B). Immunohistochemical analysis with synaptophysin (C) confirmed the neuroendocrine nature of the tumor and the presence of S100-positive sustentacular cells (D) was typical for paraganglioma. Cell proliferation was increased with Ki67 index reaching 10% (E). Tumor cells were strongly positive for SSTR2A (F). ATRX was preserved in endothelial cells; however, there was no ATRX nuclear immunolabeling in the tumor cells (G). TP53 was negative (H). Insert in H shows TP53 expression in the positive control tissue from a p53 mutated carcinoma (magnification is 200× for all microphotographs except (A) that has 400× and (B) that has 100×).
Figure 4ATRX and TP53 mutations in a patient with metastatic primary sellar paraganglioma. NGS sequencing using a panel with 20 genes commonly mutated in gliomas identified two tumor suppressor mutations: a nonsense mutation in ATRX and missense mutation in TP53 with frequencies of 85% and 50%, respectively. Coverage and pile-up of sequencing raw data visualized using a genome browser depict the mutations in red (lower panels; minus orientation), and healthy donor controls (upper panels) were included for comparison. Schematic diagrams show ATRX and TP53 exon structures with positions of mutations indicated. Only exons containing coding sequence were included (ATRX: ex. 1 through ex. 35; TP53: ex. 2 through ex. 11). The large exon 9 of ATRX, depicted with stippled lines, is compressed for clarity. Protein domains are highlighted in light colors (ADD: ATRX-DNMT3-DNMT3L). The ATRX c.4048G>T mutation results in pre-termination of ATRX at G1350 in the central portion of the 2492-residue protein, whereas the c.847C>T mutation of TP53 causes an R283C substitution in the C-terminus of the DNA binding domain.