Molecular analysis of mixed endometrial carcinomas shows clonality in most cases Journal Article


Authors: Kobel, M.; Meng, B.; Hoang, L. N.; Almadani, N.; Li, X.; Soslow, R. A.; Gilks, C. B.; Lee, C. H.
Article Title: Molecular analysis of mixed endometrial carcinomas shows clonality in most cases
Abstract: Mixed endometrial carcinoma refers to a tumor that comprises 2 or more distinct histotypes.We studied 18 mixed-type endometrial carcinomas-11 mixed serous and low-grade endometrioid carcinomas (SC/EC), 5 mixed clear cell and low-grade ECs (CCC/EC), and 2 mixed CCC and SCs (CCC/SC), using targeted next-generation sequencing and immunohistochemistry to compare the molecular profiles of the different histotypes present in each case. In 16 of 18 cases there was molecular evidence that both components shared a clonal origin. Eight cases (6 EC/SC, 1 EC/CCC, and 1 SC/CCC) showed an SC molecular profile that was the same in both components. Five cases (3 CCC/EC and 2 SC/EC) showed a shared endometrioid molecular profile and identical mismatch-repair protein deficiency in both components. A single SC/EC case harbored the same POLE exonuclease domain mutation in both components. One SC/CCC and 1 EC/CCC case showed both shared and unique molecular features in the 2 histotype components, suggesting early molecular divergence from a common clonal origin. In 2 cases, there were no shared molecular features, and these appear to be biologically unrelated synchronous tumors. Overall, these results show that the different histologic components in mixed endometrial carcinomas typically share the same molecular aberrations. Mixed endometrial carcinomas most commonly occur through morphologic mimicry, whereby tumors with serous-type molecular profile show morphologic features of EC or CCC, or through underlying deficiency in DNA nucleotide repair, with resulting rapid accrual of mutations and intratumoral phenotypic heterogeneity. Less commonly, mixed endometrial carcinomas are the result of early molecular divergence from a common progenitor clone or are synchronous biologically unrelated tumors (collision tumors). © 2015 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords: endometrial cancer; serous carcinoma; endometrioid carcinoma clear cell carcinoma; mixed carcinoma; nextgeneration sequencing
Journal Title: American Journal of Surgical Pathology
Volume: 40
Issue: 2
ISSN: 0147-5185
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins  
Date Published: 2016-02-01
Start Page: 166
End Page: 180
Language: English
DOI: 10.1097/pas.0000000000000536
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 26492180
PMCID: PMC5029122
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 3 March 2016 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Robert Soslow
    793 Soslow