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Molecular and Clinical Features of Adrenocortical Tumors in Beckwith–Wiedemann Spectrum.

Authors :
Carli, Diana
Rondot, Federico
Luca, Maria
Campello, Anna
Vallero, Stefano Gabriele
Tirtei, Elisa
Gazzin, Andrea
Cardaropoli, Simona
Montanari, Francesca
Graziano, Claudio
Quarello, Paola
Saadat, Abu
Sparago, Angela
Ferrero, Giovanni Battista
Fagioli, Franca
Mussa, Alessandro
Source :
Cancers. Dec2024, Vol. 16 Issue 23, p3967. 13p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Simple Summary: Adrenocortical tumors (ACTs) are rare in children and can be benign (adrenocortical adenoma or ACA) or malignant (adrenocortical carcinoma or ACC). Children with Beckwith–Wiedemann spectrum (BWSp) are at an increased risk of developing ACTs, but there is uncertainty around the prognosis, management, and molecular characteristics associated with these tumors. In this study, we provide a literature review of data from 54 published patients with BWSp-ACT and report on one additional new patient, totaling 55 cases: 19 ACA, 33 ACC, and 3 uncertain malignant potential (umACT). Almost half of the ACC patients were clinically diagnosed with BWSp after ACC onset, suggesting that the BWSp clinical diagnostic score has limited value for early diagnosis in this setting. Two patients with metastatic ACC had a low histopathological Wieneke score, confirming limitations of the current histopathological classification, as previously documented. Ultrasound screening failed to identify ACC before metastasis in two cases, indicating a need for new screening strategies for ACTs in children with BWSp. Notably, in some cases, metastatic ACC exhibited unexpectedly indolent behavior, despite their malignancy. Background/Objectives: Adrenocortical tumors (ACTs), including adrenocortical adenoma (ACA) and carcinoma (ACC), represent 0.3–0.4% of pediatric tumors. Beckwith–Wiedemann spectrum (BWSp) confer an increased risk of ACTs, but prognosis, management, and associated molecular characteristics are unclear. Methods: This paper combines a literature review of 54 published cases of BWSp-ACT with a report of one newly identified patient, totaling 55 cases with a confirmed BWSp clinical and/or molecular diagnosis. Results: Nineteen patients with ACA, 33 with ACC, and 3 with ACT of uncertain malignant potential (umACT) were included. Twenty patients had uniparental disomy of chromosome 11p15.5 (patUPD11), 11imprinting Center 2 Loss-of-methylation (IC2-LoM), and had 2 11p15 locus duplication. Eleven patients were diagnosed during cancer screening procedures, including two metastatic at diagnosis ACC. Conclusions: Almost half of ACC patients reached the minimum score for clinical BWSp diagnosis only after ACC onset, suggesting that the BWSp score has limited value for the early diagnosis in such a setting. Two patients with metastatic ACC had a histopathological Wieneke score ≤2, not correlating with clinical malignancy and confirming limitations of the current histopathological classification, as previously documented. Ultrasound screening failed identifying the ACC before metastasis in two cases, indicating an urgent need to develop new strategies for screening of ACTs in BWSp. Furthermore, some cases of metastatic ACC exhibited unexpectedly indolent behavior despite being malignant. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
16
Issue :
23
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
181660966
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16233967