Early genetic divergence of high-grade carcinomas originating from low-grade serous ovarian neoplasms Journal Article


Authors: Chui, M. H.; Song, Q.; Zhu, J.; Jiao, Y.; Wang, B.; Wang, Y.; Wang, T. L.; Vang, R.; Shih, I. M.
Article Title: Early genetic divergence of high-grade carcinomas originating from low-grade serous ovarian neoplasms
Abstract: The current paradigm implicates a fallopian tube precursor as the origin of most ovarian high-grade serous carcinomas (HGSCs). However, a rare subset of HGSCs develop via a distinct pathway from low-grade serous ovarian neoplasms (namely, serous borderline tumors and low-grade serous carcinoma). This alternate pathway for the development of HGSC and other poorly differentiated carcinomas of the ovary is not well understood. To elucidate the molecular pathogenesis and evolutionary trajectory of histologic transformation of low-grade serous neoplasms, we performed whole exome sequencing on microdissected low-grade and higher-grade components from 7 cases of serous borderline tumor or low-grade serous carcinoma associated with a synchronous or metachronous indeterminate/high-grade carcinoma. In most cases, there were relatively few somatic mutations shared between matched low-grade and higher-grade tumors compared with private mutations specific to each component (ie, phylogenetic trees with short trunks and long branches). Truncal mutations, present across all tumor samples from a given patient, included known drivers of low-grade serous neoplasms: KRAS (G12D, n = 4), BRAF (G469A, n = 1), NF2 (n = 1), and USP9X (n = 1). Transformation to HGSC was associated with a TP53 mutation with bi-allelic inactivation in 3 cases, all with severe nuclear atypia, and associated with genome-wide copy number alterations and allelic imbalances. TP53-wildtype tumors comprised a morphologic spectrum, which included indeterminate-grade serous carcinomas with moderate nuclear atypia and high mitotic activity, although lacking extensive chromosomal instability (n = 2) and poorly differentiated carcinomas (n = 2, including a high-grade Mullerian carcinoma and an undifferentiated carcinoma with sarcomatoid features). In summary, synchronous and metachronous low-grade serous neoplasms and higher-grade carcinomas are clonally related. Early genetic divergence, most evident in cases with TP53 mutations, suggests that high-grade transformation may be a relatively early molecular event. © 2024 United States & Canadian Academy of Pathology
Keywords: tp53; high-grade serous carcinoma; low-grade serous carcinoma; serous borderline tumor; whole exome sequencing; high-grade transformation
Journal Title: Modern Pathology
Volume: 38
Issue: 1
ISSN: 0893-3952
Publisher: Nature Research  
Date Published: 2025-01-01
Start Page: 100629
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.modpat.2024.100629
PUBMED: 39389422
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: The MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) is acknowledge in the PDF -- Corresponding authors is MSK author: M. Herman Chui -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Michael Herman Chui
    60 Chui