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Comprehensive clinicopathological and molecular analysis of primary malignant melanoma of the oesophagus.

Authors :
Sho Tsuyama
Shinji Kohsaka
Takuo Hayashi
Yoshiyuki Suehara
Takashi Hashimoto
Yoshiaki Kajiyama
Masahiko Tsurumaru
Toshihide Ueno
Hiroyuki Mano
Takashi Yao
Tsuyoshi Saito
Source :
Histopathology. Jan2021, Vol. 78, p240-251. 12p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Aims: This study was performed to elucidate the clinicopathological characteristics, genetic alterations and therapeutic targets of primary malignant melanoma of the oesophagus (PMME). Methods and results: The clinicopathology and molecular pathology of 13 PMME cases and 10 skin malignant melanoma (SKMM) cases were analysed with next-generation sequencing (NGS) and immunohistochemistry. The 3-year overall survival rate and the median survival time for PMME patients were 23.1% and 11.9 months, respectively. Three (23.1%) and eight (61.5%) PMME cases showed a papillary structure and lymph node metastasis, respectively. DNA and RNA hybridization capture-based NGS analysis revealed that NF1 was the most frequently mutated gene (30%) in 10 of the PMME cases. Other mutations detected in PMME included SF3B1 (20%), KRAS (10%), BRCA2 (10%), KIT (10%) and TP53 (10%) mutations. Commonly detected BRAF mutations in SKMM were not detected in PMME. Immunohistochemistry and mutation status were concordant between p53/c-Kit and TP53/KIT, respectively. Focal expression of programmed death-ligand 1 was observed in one PMME sample. The tumour mutation burden in PMME was significantly lower than that in SKMM (P = 0.030). No PMME case showed high microsatellite instability. RNA sequencing revealed a distinctive pattern with respect to RNA expression. Tcell co-stimulation differed between PMME and SKMM. Conclusions: The RAS-mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway is one of the main pathways involved in PMME. The genetic profile of PMME was similar to that of mucosal/acral melanoma, but differed from the SKMM profile. A subset of PMMEs may contain actionable mutations. Immunotherapy seemed to be less effective for most PMMEs in this series. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03090167
Volume :
78
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Histopathology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
149083276
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/his.14210