Back to Search Start Over

Characterization of thyroid cancer driven by known and novel ALK fusions

Authors :
Cihan Kaya
Alyaksandr V. Nikitski
Vincenzo Condello
Marina N. Nikiforova
Abigail I. Wald
Simion I. Chiosea
Yuri E. Nikiforov
Federica Panebianco
Linwah Yip
Source :
Endocr Relat Cancer
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Bioscientifica, 2019.

Abstract

ALK fusions are found in various tumors, including thyroid cancer, and serve as a diagnostic marker and therapeutic target. Spectrum and outcomes of ALK fusions found in thyroid nodules and cancer are not fully characterized. We report a series of 44 ALK-translocated thyroid neoplasms, including 31 identified preoperatively in thyroid fine-needle aspirates (FNA). The average patients’ age was 43 years (range, 8–76 years); only one with radiation history. All 19 resected thyroid nodules with ALK fusion identified preoperatively were malignant. Among nodules with known surgical pathology (n = 32), 84% were papillary thyroid carcinomas (PTCs) and 16% poorly differentiated thyroid carcinomas (PDTCs). PTCs showed infiltrative growth with follicular architecture seen exclusively (30%) or in combination with papillary and/or solid growth (37%). Tumor multifocality was seen in 10 (31%) PTC cases. Most PDTC had a well-differentiated PTC component. Lymph node metastases were identified in 10/18 (56%) patients with neck dissection. The most common ALK fusion partners were STRN (n = 22) and EML4 (n = 17). In five cases, novel ALK fusion partners were discovered. All five PDTCs carried STRN-ALK fusion. On follow-up, ten patients were free of disease at 2–108 months, whereas two patients with PDTC died of disease. In summary, ALK fusion-positive thyroid carcinomas are typically infiltrative PTC with common follicular growth, which may show tumor dedifferentiation associated with increased mortality. Compared to EML4-ALK, STRN-ALK may be more common in PDTC, and ~10% of ALK fusions occur to rare gene partners. When ALK fusion is detected preoperatively in FNA samples, malignancy should be expected.

Details

ISSN :
14796821 and 13510088
Volume :
26
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Endocrine-Related Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4c718e089d30d6951e5849b637b234d1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1530/erc-19-0325