1. Whole-Genome and Segmental Homozygosity Confirm Errors in Meiosis as Etiology of Struma Ovarii
- Author
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Ann L. Craddock, Julie R. Jones, Stanley J. Robboy, Alka Chaubey, Lawrence M. Roth, Brittany B. Henderson, Michael J. Friez, Edward H. Kincaid, Roger E. Stevenson, John M. Sundermann, Gregory Tarasidis, Leslie Stevenson, and Jeff W. Chou
- Subjects
Adult ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ovary ,Biology ,Heart Neoplasms ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Neoplasm ,Humans ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,Molecular Biology ,Genetics (clinical) ,030304 developmental biology ,Aged ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,0303 health sciences ,Struma ovarii ,Genome, Human ,Sequence Analysis, RNA ,Thyroid ,Carcinoma ,Homozygote ,Teratoma ,Cancer ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Struma Ovarii ,Mandibular Neoplasms ,Meiosis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Etiology ,Abdomen ,Female ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Gene Deletion - Abstract
Strumae ovarii are neoplasms composed of normal-appearing thyroid tissue that occur within the ovary and rarely spread to extraovarian sites. A unique case of struma ovarii with widespread dissemination detected 48 years after removal of a pelvic dermoid provided the opportunity to reexamine the molecular nature of this form of neoplasm. One tumor, from the heart, consisting of benign thyroid tissue was found to have whole-genome homozygosity. Another tumor from the right mandible composed of malignant-appearing thyroid tissue showed whole-genome homozygosity and a deletion of 7p, presumably the second hit that transformed it into a cancerous tumor. Specimens from 2 other cases of extraovarian struma confined to the abdomen and 8 of 9 cases of intraovarian struma showed genome-wide segmental homozygosity. These findings confirm errors in meiosis as the origin of struma ovarii. The histological and molecular findings further demonstrate that even when outside the ovary, strumae ovarii can behave nonaggressively until they receive a second hit, thereafter behaving like cancer.
- Published
- 2019