Tubulocystic carcinoma of bile ducts: A distinct type of cholangiocarcinoma associated with adenofibroma-type lesions Journal Article


Authors: Masetto, F.; Mafficini, A.; Saka, B.; Armutlu, A.; Chatterjee, D.; Jang, K. T.; Zen, Y.; Navale, P.; Fassan, M.; Bacchi, C. E.; Mattiolo, P.; Simbolo, M.; Ruzzenente, A.; Lawlor, R. T.; Reid, M.; Basturk, O.; Adsay, V.; Scarpa, A.; Luchini, C.
Article Title: Tubulocystic carcinoma of bile ducts: A distinct type of cholangiocarcinoma associated with adenofibroma-type lesions
Abstract: A type of cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) characterized by peculiar histologic patterns and underlying adenofibromatous lesions has been reported in the literature mostly as individual case reports. This study aims to further clarify the defining characteristics of this spectrum of lesions. Clinicopathologic analysis of 8 biliary tumors with tubulocystic architecture arising in the background of adenofibroma-type lesions was performed. Three of these were also investigated with next-generation sequencing with a 174 genes panel. The patients were 5 males and 3 females, with a mean age of 64.6. All tumors were intrahepatic except for one perihilar that protruded into soft tissues. The mean size was 4.4 cm. At histology, all cases showed a peculiar and cytologically bland tubulocystic pattern that closely resembled tubulocystic-type kidney cancers, including back-to-back microcystic units that formed relatively demarcated nodules, and occurring in the background of adenofibromatous lesions. One case showed perineural invasion by otherwise deceptively benign-appearing microcystic structures, one had areas transitioning to intraductal tubulopapillary neoplasm, and 3 cases harbored more conventional small-duct CCA foci. In those 3 cases, both the tubulocystic and conventional CCA components were investigated by next-generation sequencing separately, and they shared the molecular alterations, including recurrent mutations in chromatin remodeling genes, such as ARID1A, BAP1, and PBRM1, and the actionable FGFR2-MCU fusion gene. In the limited follow-up, all but one were alive and free of disease after surgical resection. In conclusion, we described a distinct entity of CCA with specific histo-molecular features, for which we propose the designation of tubulocystic carcinoma of bile ducts. © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health. All rights reserved.
Keywords: adult; clinical article; human tissue; aged; middle aged; cancer surgery; somatic mutation; genetics; mutation; clinical feature; liver transplantation; cancer patient; follow up; phenotype; tumor volume; pathology; vascularization; tumor marker; histology; morphology; microsatellite instability; stroma; surgery; hepatectomy; bile duct carcinoma; bile duct neoplasms; bile ducts, intrahepatic; cholangiocarcinoma; heterozygosity loss; autopsy; dna extraction; perineural invasion; chromatin assembly and disassembly; time of death; adenofibroma; copy number variation; bile duct tumor; liver graft; intrahepatic bile duct; biliary; tubulocystic renal cell carcinoma; high throughput sequencing; high-throughput nucleotide sequencing; fgfr2; very elderly; humans; human; male; female; article; segmentectomy; biomarkers, tumor; chromatin remodelers; tumor mutational burden; paired end sequencing; tubulocystic
Journal Title: American Journal of Surgical Pathology
Volume: 48
Issue: 9
ISSN: 0147-5185
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins  
Date Published: 2024-09-01
Start Page: 1082
End Page: 1092
Language: English
DOI: 10.1097/pas.0000000000002278
PUBMED: 38946053
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Olca Basturk
    352 Basturk