| Literature DB >> 35590107 |
Gregory R Bean1, Saleh Najjar1, Sandra J Shin2, Elizabeth M Hosfield3, Jennifer L Caswell-Jin4, Anatoly Urisman5, Kirk D Jones5, Yunn-Yi Chen5, Gregor Krings6.
Abstract
Neuroendocrine carcinomas (NEC) of the breast are exceedingly rare tumors, which are classified in the WHO system as small cell (SCNEC) and large cell (LCNEC) carcinoma based on indistinguishable features from their lung counterparts. In contrast to lung and enteropancreatic NEC, the genomics of breast NEC have not been well-characterized. In this study, we examined the clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical, and genetic features of 13 breast NEC (7 SCNEC, 4 LCNEC, 2 NEC with ambiguous small versus large cell morphology [ANEC]). Co-alterations of TP53 and RB1 were identified in 86% (6/7) SCNEC, 100% (2/2) ANEC, and 50% (2/4) LCNEC. The one SCNEC without TP53/RB1 alteration had other p53 pathway aberrations (MDM2 and MDM4 amplification) and was immunohistochemically RB negative. PIK3CA/PTEN pathway alterations and ZNF703 amplifications were each identified in 46% (6/13) NEC. Two tumors (1 SCNEC, 1 LCNEC) were CDH1 mutated. By immunohistochemistry, 100% SCNEC (6/6) and ANEC (2/2) and 50% (2/4) LCNEC (83% NEC) showed RB loss, compared to 0% (0/8) grade 3 neuroendocrine tumors (NET) (p < 0.001) and 38% (36/95) grade 3 invasive ductal carcinomas of no special type (IDC-NST) (p = 0.004). NEC were also more often p53 aberrant (60% vs 0%, p = 0.013), ER negative (69% vs 0%, p = 0.005), and GATA3 negative (67% vs 0%, p = 0.013) than grade 3 NET. Two mixed NEC had IDC-NST components, and 69% (9/13) of tumors were associated with carcinoma in situ (6 neuroendocrine DCIS, 2 non-neuroendocrine DCIS, 1 non-neuroendocrine LCIS). NEC and IDC-NST components of mixed tumors were clonally related and immunophenotypically distinct, lacking ER and GATA3 expression in NEC relative to IDC-NST, with RB loss only in NEC of one ANEC. The findings provide insight into the pathogenesis of breast NEC, underscore their classification as a distinct tumor type, and highlight genetic similarities to extramammary NEC, including highly prevalent p53/RB pathway aberrations in SCNEC.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35590107 PMCID: PMC9514991 DOI: 10.1038/s41379-022-01090-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mod Pathol ISSN: 0893-3952 Impact factor: 8.209
Fig. 1Breast neuroendocrine carcinomas.
Neuroendocrine carcinomas exhibited organoid, nested, trabecular, and/or sheet-like growth patterns; some tumors demonstrated circumscribed or expansile borders (A, LCNEC1; B, SCNEC1). C Geographic tumor necrosis was often present (SCNEC3). D Single-cell necrosis and apoptotic bodies were prevalent (SCNEC7). E The majority of cases showed focal in situ carcinoma with neuroendocrine features similar to the invasive tumor (SCNEC4). F Classic cytologic features were used to diagnose small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma, including high nuclear:cytoplasmic ratio, indistinct nucleoli, and nuclear molding (SCNEC4). G Rare cases demonstrated more spindled cytomorphology (SCNEC1). H Features supportive of large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma included abundant cytoplasm, distinct and more frequent nucleoli, and well-defined cellular borders (LCNEC2). I Occasional cases demonstrated scant cytoplasm yet prominent nucleoli; such NEC with mixed features were designated as ambiguous between small cell and large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (ANEC1). Cases were positive for neuroendocrine markers by immunohistochemistry, including synaptophysin (J), chromogranin (K), and INSM1 (L) (LCNEC2).
Clinicopathologic features of neuroendocrine carcinomas.
| Case ID | Age (y) | Notting-ham Grade | Tumor Size (cm) | Carcinoma In Situ | Lympho-vascular Invasion | Lymph Node Status | Mixed Component | ER | PR | HER2 | Treatment | Follow-Up (m) | Relevant Cancer History |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCNEC1 | 79 | 3 | 1.4 | DCIS, F (NE) | - | - (0/1) | - | - | - | Lumpectomy, chemotherapy, brain radiation | Lung and brain metastases; DOD (8) | ||
| SCNEC2 | 55 | 3 | 11.4a | -b | -b | +c | - | - | - | Neoadjuvant to palliative chemotherapy, radiation | Lung, liver, and bone metastases; DOD (7) | ||
| SCNEC3 | 70 | 3 | 4 | DCIS, F (NE) | + | +b | - | - | - | Lumpectomy, chemotherapy, radiation | LFU (3) | Synchronous lung mass (stable after chemotherapy) | |
| SCNEC4 | 44 | 3 | 2 | DCIS, F (NE) | - | - (0/21) | - | - | - | Lumpectomy, chemotherapy, radiation | NED (27) | ||
| SCNEC5 | 65 | 3 | 4 | LCIS, F (non-NE) | - | - (0/8) | - | - | - | Excision, mastectomy, chemotherapy, endocrine therapy | Liver metastasis (15); LFU | ||
| SCNEC6 | 57 | 3 | 2.5 | DCIS (NE) | - | - (0/19) | + | + | - | Mastectomy, chemotherapy | LFU (10) | ||
| SCNEC7 | 81 | 3 | “large ulcerated wound” | -b | -b | NP | + | + | - | Palliative chemotherapy, no surgery, endocrine therapy | DOD (4) | Ipsilateral breast cancer 40 years prior (treated with lumpectomy, radiation, chemotherapy) | |
| ANEC1 | 54 | 3 | 3.8 | - | - | - (0/4) | - | - | - | Lumpectomy, re-excision, chemotherapy | Chest wall metastasis; DOD (23) | ||
| ANEC2 | 71 | 3 | 5 | DCIS, F (non-NE) | + | + (1/1) | IDC-NST | - (+d) | - (+d) | - | Mastectomy, chemotherapy, endocrine therapy, excision of metastasis | Multiple metastases; DOD (48) | |
| LCNEC1 | 69 | 3 | 1.8 | DCIS, F (non-NE) | + | + (4/6) | IDC-NST | - (+d) | + (-d) | - | Lumpectomy, chemotherapy, radiation | NED (38) | Synchronous recurrence of base of tongue squamous cell carcinoma |
| LCNEC2 | 40 | 3 | 5a | -b | -b | +b | - | - | -IHC, +FISH | Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (progressed on therapy), no surgery | Liver and bone metastases; AWD (9) | ||
| LCNEC3 | 38 | 3 | 4.3e | DCIS, F (NE) | + | + (2/12) | + | + | - (+e) | Neoadjuvant chemotherapy, mastectomy, radiation, chemotherapy, endocrine therapy, BSO | NED (67) | ||
| LCNEC4 | 74 | 3 | 4 | DCIS, F (NE) | + | NP | + | + | - | Lumpectomyf | Deceasedf (8) |
AWD alive with disease, BSO bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, DCIS ductal carcinoma in situ, DOD died of disease, F focal, FISH fluorescence in situ hybridization, IHC immunohistochemistry, IDC-NST invasive ductal carcinoma of no special type, LCIS lobular carcinoma in situ, LFU lost to follow-up, NE neuroendocrine, NED no evidence of disease, NP not performed.
aBased on imaging alone.
bBased on core biopsy alone.
cBased on fine needle aspiration alone.
dIn IDC-NST component.
eFollowing neoadjuvant chemotherapy.
fAdditional information unknown.
Fig. 2Immunohistochemical profiles of neuroendocrine carcinomas.
Fig. 3High-grade neuroendocrine neoplasms not meeting criteria for neuroendocrine carcinoma.
Nottingham grade 3 breast carcinomas that were diffusely positive for synaptophysin but did not morphologically resemble SCNEC or LCNEC of the lung were designated as neuroendocrine tumors (A, NET1; B, NET6; C, NET7; D, NET3; E, NET5). These high-grade NET demonstrated intermediate grade nuclei and a high mitotic index. Some exhibited focal glandular architecture (C). Immunohistochemical profiles of NET showed a wild-type p53 pattern (F), intact RB expression (G), and diffusely positive GATA3 (H) (NET5 shown).
Fig. 4Genetic profiles of neuroendocrine carcinomas.
RB and p53 alterations in neuroendocrine carcinomas.
| Case ID | p53 IHC | RB IHC | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| p.Y126_R158del | − | p.D394fs | − | |
| p.C238F | NP | c.2212-1G>C | − | |
| Deep deletion | − | p.K202fs | − | |
| c.993+1G>A | − | Deep deletion | − | |
| p.G266E | + | c.2107-1G>C | − | |
| p.R213L | NP | p.T197fs | NP | |
| None | + | NP | − | |
| p.M133K | ++ | Deep deletion | − | |
| p.R248W | NP | Deep deletion | − | |
| p.R342* | ++a | Rearrangement | − | |
| p.Y163C | ++ | p.Y325fs | − | |
| None | + | None | + | |
| None | + | None | + |
−Negative (null); +Positive, non-diffuse (<90%); ++Positive, diffuse (≥90%).
IHC immunohistochemistry, NP not performed.
aNuclear and cytoplasmic staining.
Fig. 5Aberrant immunohistochemical expression patterns of RB, p53, and p16 in neuroendocrine carcinomas.
Co-alteration of RB and p53 was frequent in NEC, such as a null p53 staining pattern (A) and negative RB expression (B) in SCNEC1, and diffusely positive (overexpressed) p53 staining pattern (C) with negative RB expression (D) in ANEC1. A subset of LCNEC and all non-NEC exhibited wild-type p53 (E) and intact RB expression (F) (LCNEC4). G-J LCNEC1 demonstrated an unusual aberrant nuclear and cytoplasmic staining pattern for p53 (H) with negative RB expression (I). p16 was diffusely positive in all tumors with RB loss (J).
Fig. 6Mixed neuroendocrine carcinoma and invasive ductal carcinoma of no special type.
ANEC2 was comprised of mixed components of NEC and IDC-NST (A left, IDC-NST; right, NEC). B Synaptophysin highlights the NEC component. C, D The IDC-NST component shows intact RB expression (D); E, F The NEC component is RB negative (F). G ER is diffusely positive in IDC-NST (left) and negative in the NEC component (right). H GATA3 expression mirrors ER. I Chromosomal copy number plots reveal multiple gains and losses that are shared between the IDC-NST and NEC components, with additional alterations only in NEC (red arrows). J Immunohistochemical and genetic profiles of the separately analyzed components of ANEC2 and LCNEC1, summarizing features that are shared and unique between the components.