| Literature DB >> 35752743 |
Lisa Vermij1, Alicia Léon-Castillo1, Naveena Singh2, Melanie E Powell3, Richard J Edmondson4, Catherine Genestie5, Pearly Khaw6, Jan Pyman7, C Meg McLachlin8, Prafull Ghatage9, Stephanie M de Boer10, Hans W Nijman11, Vincent T H B M Smit1, Emma J Crosbie4,12, Alexandra Leary13, Carien L Creutzberg10, Nanda Horeweg10, Tjalling Bosse14.
Abstract
Standard molecular classification of endometrial cancers (EC) is now endorsed by the WHO and identifies p53-abnormal (p53abn) EC as the subgroup with the poorest prognosis and the most likely to benefit from adjuvant chemo(radio)therapy. P53abn EC are POLE wildtype, mismatch repair proficient and show abnormal immunohistochemical (IHC) staining for p53. Correct interpretation of routinely performed p53 IHC has therefore become of paramount importance. We aimed to comprehensively investigate abnormal p53 IHC patterns and their relation to clinicopathological and molecular features. Tumor material of 411 molecularly classified high-risk EC from consenting patients from the PORTEC-3 clinical trial were collected. p53 IHC was successful in 408 EC and was considered abnormal when the tumor showed a mutant expression pattern (including subclonal): overexpression, null or cytoplasmic. The presence of pathogenic mutations was determined by next generation sequencing (NGS). Abnormal p53 expression was observed in 131/408 (32%) tumors. The most common abnormal p53 IHC pattern was overexpression (n = 89, 68%), followed by null (n = 12, 9%) and cytoplasmic (n = 3, 2%). Subclonal abnormal p53 staining was observed in 27 cases (21%), which was frequently but not exclusively, associated with POLE mutations and/or MMRd (n = 22/27; p < 0.001). Agreement between p53 IHC and TP53 NGS was observed in 90.7%, resulting in a sensitivity and specificity of 83.6% and 94.3%, respectively. Excluding POLEmut and MMRd EC, as per the WHO-endorsed algorithm, increased the accuracy to 94.5% with sensitivity and specificity of 95.0% and 94.1%, respectively. Our data shows that awareness of the abnormal p53 IHC patterns are prerequisites for correct EC molecular classification. Subclonal abnormal p53 expression is a strong indicator for POLEmut and/or MMRd EC. No significant differences in clinical outcomes were observed among the abnormal p53 IHC patterns. Our data support use of the WHO-endorsed algorithm and combining the different abnormal p53 IHC patterns into one diagnostic entity (p53abn EC).Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35752743 PMCID: PMC7613653 DOI: 10.1038/s41379-022-01102-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mod Pathol ISSN: 0893-3952 Impact factor: 8.209
Figure 1Representative examples of abnormal p53 immunohistochemical staining patterns
Figure 2Flowchart of cohort selection
Patient and tumor characteristics.
| n = 408 (100%) | |
| Age, years | |
| Mean (range) | 61.2 (26.7-80.5) |
| Histotype | |
| Low grade endometrioid | 160 (39.2) |
| High grade endometrioid | 112 (27.5) |
| Serous | 65 (15.9) |
| Clear cell | 40 (9.8) |
| Mixed EEC-SEC | 9 (2.2) |
| Mixed EEC-CCC | 10 (2.5) |
| Other | 12 (2.9) |
| Stage | |
| IA | 54 (13.2) |
| IB | 73 (17.9) |
| II | 105 (25.7) |
| III | 176 (43.1) |
| Specimen type | |
| Hysterectomy specimen | 394 (96.6) |
| Curettage/biopsy | 13 (3.2) |
| Lymph node | 1 (0.2) |
Abbreviations: EEC, endometrioid endometrial cancer; SEC, serous endometrial cancer; CCC, clear cell carcinoma.
Detailed description of endometrial cancers with subclonal abnormal p53 expression.
| Case nr. | Molecular subgroup | Histotype and grade | % of abnormal p53 expression | DNA isolation in p53 abn area | Type of mutation | VAF | cDNA change | Amino acid change | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | MMRd | G2 EEC | <10% | Unknown | Failed | - | - | - | - |
| 2 | NSMP | G3 EEC | <10% | Unknown | Failed | - | - | - | - |
| 3 | mixed EEC-CCC | <10% | Unknown | No | - | - | - | - | |
| 4 | G3 EEC | <10% | No | No | - | - | - | - | |
| 5 | other | <10% | No | No | - | - | - | - | |
| 6 | MMRd | G3 EEC | <10% | No | No | - | - | - | - |
| 7 | MMRd | G3 EEC | <10% | Yes | No | - | - | - | - |
| 8 | MMRd | G2 EEC | <10% | No | No | - | - | - | - |
| 9 | NSMP | G1 EEC | <10% | Yes | No | - | - | - | - |
| 10 | G3 EEC | <10% | No | Yes | Missense | 0.19 | c.775G>T | p.Asp259Tyr | |
| 11 | G3 EEC | <10% | Unknown | Yes | Nonsense | 0.63 | c.637C>T | p.Arg213 | |
| 12 | G3 EEC | <10% | No | Yes | Missense | 0.38 | c.245C>T | p.Pro82Leu | |
| 13 | MMRd | G1 EEC | <10% | No | Yes | Missense | 0.19 | c.524G>A | p.Arg175His |
| 14 | MMRd | G3 EEC | <10% | No | Yes | Missense | 0.47 | c.524G>A | p.Arg175His |
| 15 | MMRd | G3 EEC | <10% | No | Yes | Missense | 0.26 | c.526T>A | p.Cys176Ser |
| 16 | MMRd | G2 EEC | <10% | No | Yes | Missense | 0.27 | c.374C>T | p.Thr125Met |
| 17 | NSMP | G2 EEC | <10% | Unknown | Yes | Missense | 0.33 | c.743G>A | p.Arg248Gln |
| 18 | G3 EEC | 20% | No | Yes | Missense | 0.51 | c.827C>T | p.Ala276Val | |
| 19 | MMRd | G3 EEC | 20% | Unknown | Yes | Missense | 0.28 | c.734G>A | p.Gly245Asp |
| 20 | EEC-SEC | 25% | No | Yes | Nonsense | 0.16 | c.637C>T | p.Arg213 | |
| 21 | MMRd | G3 EEC | 30% | Unknown | Failed | - | - | - | - |
| 22 | MMRd | G3 EEC | 40% | Yes | No | - | - | - | - |
| 23 | G3 EEC | 60% | Unknown | Yes | Nonsense | 0.19 | c.916C>T | p.Arg306 | |
| 24 | MMRd | G3 EEC | 60% | Yes | Yes | Missense | 0.31 | c.536A>G | p.His179Arg |
| 25 | p53abn | other | 60% | Unknown | Yes | Missense | 0.53 | c.537T>G | p.His179Gln |
| 26 | MMRd | G3 EEC | 70% | Yes | Yes | Missense | 0.47 | c.536A>G | p.His179Arg |
| 27 | p53abn | SEC | 75% | Unknown | Yes | Missense | 0.81 | c.470T>A | p.Val157Asp |
* Classified as per Leon-Castillo et al., JCO 2020, considering a 10% threshold to assign a tumor as p53abn EC.
Abbreviations: POLEmut, POLE mutant; MMRd, mismatch repair deficient; NSMP, no specific molecular profile; p53abn, p53-abnormal; EEC, endometrioid endometrial cancer; CCC, clear cell carcinoma; SEC, serous endometrial cancer; VAF, variant allele frequency
Agreement between p53 immunohistochemistry and TP53 NGS analysis.
| p53 IHC | (Likely) pathogenic mutation on | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All EC | ||||
| Absent | Present | Absent | Present | |
| Total | 228 | 116 | 102 | 80 |
| Specificity | 94.3% (95% CI 91.8-96.7%) | 94.1% (95% CI 88.9-99.3%) | ||
Abbreviations: IHC, immunohistochemistry; NGS, next generation sequencing; EC, endometrial cancer; MMR, mismatch repair; CI, confidence interval
In bold, EC with concordant p53 IHC and sequencing for TP53 mutations
Figure 3p53 immunohistochemical staining (IHC) of cases with discordant results between p53 IHC and TP53 next generation sequencing (NGS), as a result of erroneously interpreted p53 IHC. Cases shown in A-C were scored p53 wildtype but did have a frameshift TP53 mutation (A, B) and nonsense TP53 mutation (C). In retrospect, p53 IHC should have been scored as null (A, B) and cytoplasmic (C). The case shown in D was assigned ‘p53 mutant overexpression’, however did not have a TP53 mutation. Given the high expression in the stromal cells, this case was probably overstained.
Figure 4Histopathological and molecular characteristics of all high-risk endometrial cancers (n = 128) with abnormal p53 immunohistochemistry and/or a pathogenic TP53 mutation. Abbreviations: IHC, immunohistochemistry; G, grade; MMRd, mismatch repair deficient; NSMP, no specific molecular profile; p53abn, p53-abnormal.
Figure 5Kaplan-Meier curves for time to recurrence for patients with p53-abnormal high-risk endometrial cancers with mutant overexpression and null-mutant p53 immunohistochemical staining patterns (n = 93). Abbreviations: EC, endometrial cancer