AI Article Synopsis

  • SDHRCC and FHRCC are rare kidney cancers caused by the loss of key enzymes in the TCA cycle, specifically succinate dehydrogenase and fumarate hydratase.
  • A study analyzed genetic and metabolic differences between 42 tumors from patients with these cancers, revealing distinctive genomic alterations and varying metabolite accumulations.
  • The findings show that while both types of cancer share similar genetic causes, they have unique molecular characteristics, with SDHRCC showing lower mutation and copy number alteration burdens compared to FHRCC.

Article Abstract

Background: Succinate dehydrogenase-deficient and fumarate hydratase-deficient renal cell carcinomas (SDHRCC and FHRCC) are rare kidney cancers driven by loss of TCA cycle enzymes.

Objective: To define and compare the genomic and metabolomic hallmarks of SDHRCC and FHRCC.

Design, Setting, And Participants: We analyzed SDHRCC and FHRCC tumors with either immunohistochemical evidence of loss of protein expression or genomically confirmed biallelic inactivation of SDHA/B/C/D/AF2 or FH.

Outcome Measurements And Statistical Analysis: Somatic alterations were identified using clinical pipelines, with allele-specific copy number alterations (CNAs) identified using FACETS. Mass spectrometry-based metabolomic profiling was performed on available SDHRCC and FHRCC tumors.

Results And Limitations: Tumors were analyzed for 42 patients (25 FHRCC, 17 SDHRCC). In the germline analysis, 16/17 SDHRCCs harbored a germline alteration in SDHB, whereas only 17/22 FHRCCs had pathogenic germline FH variants. SDHRCCs had a lower mutation burden (p = 0.02) and CNA burden (p = 0.0002) than FHRCCs. All SDHRCCs presented with deletion of chromosome 1p (overlapping SDHB), whereas FHRCCs demonstrated high but not ubiquitous loss of 1q (FH locus). Both SDHRCCs and FHRCCs exhibited significant idiopathic accumulation of the metabolite guanine. FHRCC tumors had elevated levels of urea cycle metabolites (argininosuccinate, citrulline, and fumarate), whereas SDHRCC tumors had elevation of numerous acylcarnitines. These characteristic metabolic changes allowed identification of a previously unrecognized SDH-deficient RCC.

Conclusions: Despite sharing similar genetic etiology, SDHRCC and FHRCC represent distinct molecular entities with unique genetic and metabolic abnormalities.

Patient Summary: Kidney cancers driven by loss of the gene encoding either the succinate dehydrogenase or fumarate hydratase enzyme are rare. We sought to define and compare the genetic and metabolic features of these cancer entities.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9464266PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.euf.2021.12.002DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

sdhrcc fhrcc
16
renal cell
8
cell carcinomas
8
kidney cancers
8
cancers driven
8
driven loss
8
define compare
8
fhrcc tumors
8
genetic metabolic
8
sdhrcc
7

Similar Publications

Genomic and Metabolic Hallmarks of SDH- and FH-deficient Renal Cell Carcinomas.

Eur Urol Focus

September 2022

Computational Oncology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA; Center for Molecular Oncology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • SDHRCC and FHRCC are rare kidney cancers caused by the loss of key enzymes in the TCA cycle, specifically succinate dehydrogenase and fumarate hydratase.
  • A study analyzed genetic and metabolic differences between 42 tumors from patients with these cancers, revealing distinctive genomic alterations and varying metabolite accumulations.
  • The findings show that while both types of cancer share similar genetic causes, they have unique molecular characteristics, with SDHRCC showing lower mutation and copy number alteration burdens compared to FHRCC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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!