| Literature DB >> 35455885 |
Luigi Pio Guerrera1, Gabriella Suarato1, Rossella Napolitano1, Alessandra Perrone1, Vincenza Caputo1, Anna Ventriglia1, Giulia Martini1, Carminia Maria Della Corte1, Michele Orditura1, Erika Martinelli1, Fortunato Ciardiello1, Marco Montella2, Renato Franco2, Teresa Troiani1, Stefania Napolitano1.
Abstract
Mixed neuroendocrine non-neuroendocrine neoplasms (MiNENs) refer to heterogenous rare neoplasms constituted of at least a neuroendocrine population-either well-differentiated, or more frequently poorly differentiated-and a non-neuroendocrine population, both accounting for at least 30% of the whole tumor mass. Several studies recently focused on the key genetic and epigenetic changes underlying MiNENs to better understand how they develop, and explore biological similarities among the two components and their pure counterparts. However, their molecular landscape still remains poorly understood. NGS may represent a useful tool to study this orphan disease by detecting the main genetic alterations and possible therapeutic targets. NGS analysis on tissue and/or blood samples through the Foundation One (F1) platform was performed on consecutive samples collected from four patients diagnosed with MiNENs of the gastroenteric tract. Several genetic alterations were shared among samples from the same patients, thus suggesting a common origin between them, although morphology sometimes changed at histopathological evaluation. Common molecular alterations among samples from different patients that had not been previously described to our knowledge were also detected. Finally, it is of the utmost importance to clarify if the maintenance of the 30% cut-off is still essential in defining MiNENs and really manages to include all of the mixed neoplasms.Entities:
Keywords: Foundation One (F1); MiNENs; NGS analysis; gastrointestinal tumors; mixed neuroendocrine/non-neuroendocrine neoplasms
Year: 2022 PMID: 35455885 PMCID: PMC9028985 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare10040708
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Figure 1A comprehensive representation of the three main theories about MiNENs’ origin proposed to date. From the left to the right, collision theory, common precursor theory, and trans-differentiation theory are illustrated respectively. As mentioned in the text, the first one suggests that neuroendocrine and non-neuroendocrine components arise independently from distinct precursor cells, the second one postulates a common origin from a pluripotent stem cell progenitor, which differentiates towards both components; finally, the third one assumes that neuroendocrine differentiation is the result of progressive accumulation of genetic alterations in an initially non-neuroendocrine cell phenotype.
Overview of the morphological and immunohistochemical features of all the tumor samples evaluated.
| Sample | Morphology | Immunohistochemistry | Sample | Morphology | Immunohistochemistry | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| surgical | Two neoplastic neuroendocrine components: large-size cells (20% of the whole neoplasm, Ki 67%: 50%), and small-size cells (80% of the whole mass, Ki 67: 90%). | Chromogranin A and CD56 positive in both the populations. | Surgical | Cells arranged in glands were described in tunica submucosa, muscularis, and subserosa without involving serosa and mucosa. | Positivity for CK19, CK7, and CDX2; |
|
| bioptic | Cells characterized by scant eosinophilic cytoplasm, finely granular chromatin, arranged in the lamina propria in an organoid growth pattern. Ki 67 > 55%. | Not performed due to the scarcity of tumor sample. | Surgical liver | Poorly differentiated neoplasia | Positivity for CDX2 and CK20; chromogranin and synaptophysin negative. |
|
| surgical | Two neoplastic components: a colorectal adenocarcinoma G2 occupying 60% of the whole neoplasm and a neuroendocrine carcinoma (40% of the tumor) composed of small cells. | Focal positivity for CK20, synaptophysin, and CDX2. | |||
|
| surgical | Two populations, each occupying 50% of the whole mass: mucinous adenocarcinoma with signet ring cells and neuroendocrine carcinoma. Tumor cells, diffusely occupied submucosa and muscolaris tunica with just focal mucosal involvement. | High and diffuse positivity for CK19 and CDX2; low but diffuse positivity for CK20; CK-7 negative. Neuroendocrine markers were just focally positive (dispersed). |
Overview of the main alterations detected in the samples examined (surgical, bioptic, blood), at least two for each case except for Case 4. Comparison among samples collected at different times in the same patient was made in order to better understand disease evolution and the behavior of its counterparts: shared alterations were highlighted in red, while new ones were reported.
| First NGS | MS | TMB | VUS | Sample | Diagnosis | Second NGS | MS | TMB | VUS | Sample | Diagnosis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| MSS | Low (4 Muts/Mb) | Surgical |
| MSS | Low | Surgical | Metastases of colon adenocarcinoma | ||||
|
|
| MSS | Intermediate | bioptic | NEC of colon |
| MSS | Intermediate | Surgical liver | Colorectal | ||
|
| MSS | 8 Muts/Mb | Surgical | MINEC | MSS | 8 Muts/Mb | Blood | Colorectal MINEC | ||||
|
| MSS | 8 Muts/Mb | Surgical | MINEC |
|
Figure 2(A) Colonic segment partially covered by normal mucosa (black star) showing infiltration, on the left side of the image, by a carcinoma with a double component: neuroendocrine and adenocarcinomatous one (H&E 4× magnification). (B) A detail of image (A) showing at higher magnification the neuroendocrine population (on the left side) arranged in pseudo-rosettes or trabeculae, composed of medium-sized cells with irregular nuclei and granular chromatin and the adenocarcinomatous component (on the right side) with evident glandular structures made up of atypical cylindrical cells (H&E 20× magnification). (C) High mitotic index typical of neuroendocrine carcinomas (H&E 40× magnification). (D) Strong positivity for synaptophysin at immunohistochemistry (40× magnification). (E) High proliferative index (Ki67) at immunohistochemical assay (40× magnification).
Figure 3(A) Histologically, a carcinoma with a double component is observed: a neuroendocrine population (on the left side), and a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma (on the right side) are clearly recognizable (H&E 10× magnification). (B) A detail of the neuroendocrine component at higher magnification showing a neoplastic population with cord architecture, medium-sized elements with scant cytoplasm, atypical nuclei, and numerous mitotic figures (H&E 20× magnification). (C) A detail of the adenocarcinomatous counterpart at higher magnification showing abundant mucus lakes with ‘floating’ scattered signet ring cells (H&E 20× magnification).