AI Article Synopsis

  • Malignant transformation of extraovarian endometriosis is rare and involves unclear carcinogenic mechanisms; two cases were studied through whole-exome sequencing, both affecting the intestine and diagnosed as endometriosis-associated intestinal tumors (EIATs).
  • Actionable variants were found in tumor suppressor genes, but no oncogenic variants were identified; both cases were microsatellite stable with different mutation signature patterns and phenotypes.
  • High expression of CD8 and PD-1 proteins in both patients suggests potential effectiveness of immune checkpoint inhibitors in treatment, highlighting the importance of mutation signature-based sequencing for selecting adjuvant chemotherapy.

Article Abstract

Malignant transformation of extraovarian endometriosis is rare, with the carcinogenesis mechanism unclear. To clarify the actionable variants of rare-site endometriosis-associated cancer (RSEAC), we performed whole-exome sequencing for the tumor, in two patients. The intestine was affected in both cases, although the histology was that of clear cell carcinoma and undifferentiated carcinoma, respectively. Therefore, the cases were referred to as endometriosis-associated intestinal tumors (EIATs). Actionable variants (all frameshift mutations) were identified in tumor suppressor genes , , and ; however, no oncogenic variants were identified. Both cases were microsatellite stable. The patient with undifferentiated carcinoma exhibited hypermutator and homologous recombination deficiency phenotypes. The dominant mutation signatures were signature 30 (small subset of breast cancers) and 19 (pilocytic astrocytoma) in patient 1, and signature 5 (small subset of breast cancers) and 3 (breast, ovarian, and pancreatic cancers) in patient 2. Immunohistochemistry revealed positive CD8 and PD-1 expression in both patients; patient 1 also showed positive PDL-1 expression. Our results suggest that RSEAC is associated with variants of tumor suppressor genes as epigenetic alterations. Mutation signature-based whole-exome sequencing could be useful to select an adjuvant chemotherapy regimen. High CD8 and PD-1 expression in RSEAC suggests that immune checkpoint inhibitors are useful for treatment.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7931088PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diseases9010014DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

whole-exome sequencing
12
endometriosis-associated cancer
8
actionable variants
8
undifferentiated carcinoma
8
tumor suppressor
8
suppressor genes
8
signature small
8
small subset
8
subset breast
8
breast cancers
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!