1. Clinical and Histopathological Features of Thyroid Cancer with TERT Promoter Molecular Alterations in Isolation Versus with Concurrent Molecular Alterations: A Multicenter Retrospective Study.
- Author
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Steinberg, Emily, Dimitstein, Orr, Morand, Grégoire B., Forest, Véronique-Isabelle, da Silva, Sabrina D., Pusztaszeri, Marc, Alohali, Sama, and Payne, Richard J.
- Subjects
ANAPLASTIC thyroid cancer ,LYMPH nodes ,CYTOLOGY ,THYROID gland tumors ,TELOMERASE ,PAPILLARY carcinoma ,PROMOTERS (Genetics) ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,TERTIARY care ,GLOBULINS ,METASTASIS ,RESEARCH ,MEDICAL records ,ACQUISITION of data ,GENETIC mutation ,MOLECULAR diagnosis - Abstract
Simple Summary: This study explores the impact of telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERTp) molecular alterations on the behavior of thyroid nodules, exploring the differential behavior of these molecular alterations occurring alone versus with concurrent molecular alterations. By analyzing the data from thyroid cancer patients treated between 2017 and 2024, this study aimed to clarify how the genetic landscape of TERTp molecular alterations relates to severity and various clinical and histopathological features of disease. The study found that thyroid cancers harboring both TERTp and concurrent molecular alterations were more likely to be classified as high-risk and have aggressive histology in contrast to nodules with TERTp molecular alterations in isolation, which generally showed less aggressive behavior. These findings suggest that identifying concurrent molecular alterations in TERTp-positive thyroid nodules could improve cancer risk assessment and prognosis and inform more tailored treatment strategies. Background/Objectives: Molecular testing of thyroid nodules enables the detection of genetic alterations, which can help assess the risk of malignancy and tumor behavior. While telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERTp) mutations are known to be associated with aggressive disease, their exact prognostic significance when occurring alone or with other molecular alterations remains underreported. Methods: This study examined patients with thyroid cancer treated at two tertiary care hospitals from 2017 to 2024. We compared tumor behavior in patients with TERTp molecular alterations occurring alone and with concurrent molecular alterations. Aggressive histologic subtypes were defined as tall-cell, hobnail, and columnar variants of papillary carcinoma, as well as poorly differentiated and anaplastic carcinoma. High-risk disease was defined according to the 2015 ATA guidelines as gross extrathyroidal extension, lymph node metastasis >3 cm, postoperative elevated serum thyroglobulin, distant metastases, and/or positive resection margins. Statistical analysis was performed to assess differences between groups. Results: 30 patients with TERTp-positive thyroid malignancies were included. TERTp/BRAF V600E was the most prevalent mutation combination (n = 13, 43.3%), followed by TERTp alone (n = 8, 26.7%) and TERTp/RAS (n = 7, 23.4%). TERTp/EIF1AX/GNAS and TERTp/EIF1AX/PIK3CA were the least common combinations (n = 1, 3.3% each). Nodules with TERTp and concurrent mutations were significantly more likely to be classified as high-risk (p = 0.006) and were more frequently associated with aggressive histologic subtypes (p = 0.003) compared to those with TERTp mutations alone, which tended to exhibit more benign behavior. Conclusions: Thyroid carcinomas harboring both TERTp and concurrent molecular alterations are associated with more aggressive features and a higher likelihood of being classified as high-risk. In contrast, TERTp mutations occurring alone do not confer an elevated risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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