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The histological spectrum and immunoprofile of head and neck NUT carcinoma: A multicentre series of 30 cases.

Authors :
Viswanathan, Kartik
Hahn, Elan
Dogan, Snjezana
Weinreb, Ilan
Dickson, Brendan C
MacMillan, Christina
Katabi, Nora
Magliocca, Kelly
Ghossein, Ronald
Xu, Bin
Source :
Histopathology; Aug2024, Vol. 85 Issue 2, p317-326, 10p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background and aim: Head and neck nuclear protein of testis carcinoma (HN‐NUT) is a rare form of carcinoma diagnosed by NUT immunohistochemistry positivity and/or NUTM1 translocation. Although the prototype of HN‐NUT is a primitive undifferentiated round cell tumour (URC) with immunopositivity for squamous markers, it is our observation that it may assume variant histology or immunoprofile. Methods: We conducted a detailed clinicopathological review of a large retrospective cohort of 30 HN‐NUT, aiming to expand its histological and immunohistochemical spectrum. Results: The median age of patients with HN‐NUT was 39 years (range = 17–86). It affected the sinonasal tract (43%), major salivary glands (20%), thyroid (13%), oral cavity (7%), larynx (7%), neck (7%) and nasopharynx (3%). Although most cases of HN‐NUT (63%) contained a component of primitive URC tumour, 53% showed other histological features and 37% lacked a URC component altogether. Variant histological features included basaloid (33%), differentiated squamous/squamoid (37%), clear cell changes (13%), glandular differentiation (7%) and papillary architecture (10%), which could co‐exist. While most HN‐NUT were positive for keratins, p63 and p40, occasional cases (5–9%) were entirely negative. Immunopositivity for neuroendocrine markers and thyroid transcription factor‐1 was observed in 33 and 36% of cases, respectively. The outcome of HN‐NUT was dismal, with a 3‐year disease specific survival of 38%. Conclusions: HN‐NUT can affect individuals across a wide age range and arise from various head and neck sites. It exhibits a diverse spectrum of histological features and may be positive for neuroendocrine markers, potentially leading to underdiagnosis. A low threshold to perform NUT‐specific tests is necessary to accurately diagnose HN‐NUT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03090167
Volume :
85
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Histopathology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178442547
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/his.15204