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Early KRAS oncogenic driver mutations in nonmucinous tissue of congenital pulmonary airway malformations as an indicator of potential malignant behavior

Authors :
Rene M. H. Wijnen
Jan H. von der Thüsen
T. Dorine den Toom
Sergei M. Hermelijn
J. Marco Schnater
Robbert J. Rottier
Janina L. Wolf
Pediatric Surgery
Pathology
Source :
Human Pathology, 103, 95-106. W.B. Saunders
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The potential for malignant degeneration is the most common reason for some practitioners to resect asymptomatic congenital pulmonary airway malformations (CPAMs). We aimed to investigate the potential of various immunohistochemical (IHC) and genomic biomarkers to predict the presence of mucinous proliferations (MPs) in CPAM. Archival CPAM tissue samples were re-assessed and underwent IHC analysis using a panel of differentiating markers (TTF1/CDX2/CC10/MUC2/MUC5AC/p16/p53/DICER1). In each sample, intensity of IHC staining was assessed separately in normal lung tissue, CPAM, and MP tissue, using a semiquantitative approach. Likewise, next-generation targeted sequencing of known adult lung driver mutations, including KRAS/BRAF/EGFR/ERBB2, was performed in all samples with MP and in control samples of CPAM tissue without MP. We analyzed samples of 25 CPAM type 1 and 25 CPAM type 2 and found MPs in 11 samples. They were all characterized by strong MUC5AC expression, and all carried a KRAS mutation in the MP and adjacent nonmucinous CPAM tissue, whereas the surrounding normal lung tissue was negative. By contrast, in less than half (5 out of 12) control samples lacking MP, the CPAM tissue also carried a KRAS mutation. KRAS mutations in nonmucinous CPAM tissue may identify lesions with a potential for malignant degeneration and may guide histopathological assessment and patient follow-up.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00468177
Volume :
103
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....210ff307e1c335ccd5b004cee5f73b12