Dissecting anaplastic thyroid carcinoma: A comprehensive clinical, histologic, immunophenotypic, and molecular study of 360 cases Journal Article


Authors: Xu, B.; Fuchs, T.; Dogan, S.; Landa, I.; Katabi, N.; Fagin, J. A.; Tuttle, R. M.; Sherman, E.; Gill, A. J.; Ghossein, R.
Article Title: Dissecting anaplastic thyroid carcinoma: A comprehensive clinical, histologic, immunophenotypic, and molecular study of 360 cases
Abstract: Background: Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC) is nearly always fatal. Large studies on ATC are exceedingly rare. We aimed to study the clinical, genotypic, and histologic characteristics of ATC in the largest retrospective cohort of ATC to date. Methods: Three hundred sixty patients with ATC from two tertiary centers were studied. Molecular testing was performed in 126 cases including 107 using next-generation sequencing. Results: The median patients' age was 68 years. Differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) was present in 208 cases (58%), the most common being papillary carcinoma (n = 150). The 1-, 2-, 3-, and 5-year overall survival (OS) was 36%, 17%, 13%, and 11%, respectively. On univariate analysis, age, resectability, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, margin status, encapsulation, gross residual disease, gross extrathyroidal extension, percentage, and size of ATC in the primary tumor predicted OS (p < 0.05). Age, resectability, chemotherapy, and gross residual disease were independent prognostic factors in the entire cohort, while gross residual disease was the only independent predictor of OS in patients who had resection of their tumor. BRAF, RAS, TERT promoter, TP53, PIK3CA, E1F1AX, and PTEN mutations were detected in 45%, 24%, 75%, 63%, 18%, 14%, and 14% of ATC, respectively. Concomitant BRAF/RAS and TERT mutations were associated with worse outcome than mutation in only one of the genes. BRAF-mutated and RAS-mutated ATCs had similar frequency of nodal and distant metastasis. Twelve cases were pure squamous cell carcinoma, 60% of which carried BRAF(V600E) mutation and showed a similar OS to other ATCs. Conclusions: (i) Gross residual disease remains the most crucial indicator of outcome in ATC. (ii) Encapsulation, margin status, percentage, and size of ATC in the primary were prognostically relevant. (iii) Pure thyroid squamous cell carcinoma may be considered as ATC given a BRAF(V600E) genotype and similar outcome. (iv) In contrast to DTC, BRAF-mutated and RAS-mutated ATCs have similar metastatic spread. (v) Concomitant mutations of BRAF or RAS with TERT confer a worse prognosis.
Keywords: survival; braf; ras; variant; immunohistochemical detection; landscape; anaplastic thyroid carcinoma; pax8; cancer; prognosis; tert; undifferentiated thyroid carcinoma
Journal Title: Thyroid
Volume: 30
Issue: 10
ISSN: 1050-7256
Publisher: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc  
Date Published: 2020-10-01
Start Page: 1505
End Page: 1517
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000532338800001
DOI: 10.1089/thy.2020.0086
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC7583343
PUBMED: 32284020
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. James A Fagin
    180 Fagin
  2. Ronald A Ghossein
    482 Ghossein
  3. Robert M Tuttle
    481 Tuttle
  4. Eric J Sherman
    339 Sherman
  5. Nora Katabi
    303 Katabi
  6. Snjezana Dogan
    187 Dogan
  7. Bin   Xu
    227 Xu