1. The utility of next‐generation sequencing in challenging liver FNA biopsies.
- Author
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Balitzer, Dana J. and Greenland, Nancy Y.
- Abstract
Background: Fine‐needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy is increasingly used for the diagnosis of hepatocellular masses. Because distinguishing well differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) from other well differentiated hepatocellular lesions (e.g., large regenerative nodules or focal nodular hyperplasia) requires an assessment of architectural features, this may be challenging on FNA when intact tissue fragments are not sampled. Poorly differentiated HCC and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) may exhibit overlapping pathologic features. Molecular testing can be helpful, because mutations in TERT promoter and CTNNB1 (β‐catenin) are characteristic of HCC, whereas mutations in BAP1, IDH1/IDH2, and PBRM1 may favor ICC. The goal of this study was to assess the role of next‐generation sequencing (NGS) in further subclassifying indeterminate liver lesions sampled by FNA. Methods: A retrospective review of liver cytology cases with NGS on cell block material was performed. Age, radiologic features, background hepatic disease and treatment, outcome, and NGS data were obtained from the electronic medical record. Results: Twelve FNA biopsies that had cell blocks from clinically suspected primary hepatic masses were identified. The presence of a TERT promoter mutation supported a diagnosis of HCC for one well differentiated neoplasm. For three patients, the presence of mutations, such as IDH1, CDKN2A/CDKN2B, and BRAF, supported a diagnosis of ICC. Of the eight poorly differentiated carcinomas, NGS helped refine the diagnosis in six of eight cases, with one HCC, three ICCs, and two that had combined HCC‐ICC, with two cases remaining unclassified. Conclusions: Molecular diagnostics can be helpful to distinguish HCC and ICC on FNA specimens, although a subset of primary hepatic tumors may remain unclassifiable. Liver lesions are increasingly being sampled by fine‐needle aspiration. The authors examined the use of next‐generation sequencing in 12 challenging liver lesions, and next‐generation sequencing was able to help refine the diagnosis in 10 of 12 cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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