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Fumarate Hydratase–deficient Uterine Leiomyomas Occur in Both the Syndromic and Sporadic Settings

Authors :
Kiril Trpkov
Loretta Sioson
Trisha Dwight
Raha Madadi-Ghahan
Justine Pickett
Ashley Crook
Lyndal Anderson
Michael Field
Katherine L. Tucker
Juliana Andrici
Adele Clarkson
Wesley J. Harrison
Petr Martinek
Ondřej Hes
Petr Grossmann
Christopher W. Toon
Bhuvana Srinivasan
Mahtab Farzin
Roderick J. Clifton-Bligh
Anthony J. Gill
Nicole Watson
Fiona Maclean
Ondrej Ondič
Annabel Goodwin
Source :
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc, 2016.

Abstract

Hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma (HLRCC) syndrome secondary to germline fumarate hydratase (FH) mutation presents with cutaneous and uterine leiomyomas, and a distinctive aggressive renal carcinoma. Identification of HLRCC patients presenting first with uterine leiomyomas may allow early intervention for renal carcinoma. We reviewed the morphology and immunohistochemical (IHC) findings in patients with uterine leiomyomas and confirmed or presumed HLRCC. IHC was also performed on a tissue microarray of unselected uterine leiomyomas and leiomyosarcomas. FH-deficient leiomyomas underwent Sanger and massively parallel sequencing on formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue. All 5 patients with HLRCC had at least 1 FH-deficient leiomyoma: defined as completely negative FH staining with positive internal controls. One percent (12/1152) of unselected uterine leiomyomas but 0 of 88 leiomyosarcomas were FH deficient. FH-deficient leiomyoma patients were younger (42.7 vs. 48.8 y, P=0.024) and commonly demonstrated a distinctive hemangiopericytomatous vasculature. Other features reported to be associated with FH-deficient leiomyomas (hypercellularity, nuclear atypia, inclusion-like nucleoli, stromal edema) were inconstantly present. Somatic FH mutations were identified in 6 of 10 informative unselected FH-deficient leiomyomas. None of these mutations were found in the germline. We conclude that, while the great majority of patients with HLRCC will have FH-deficient leiomyomas, 1% of all uterine leiomyomas are FH deficient usually due to somatic inactivation. Although IHC screening for FH may have a role in confirming patients at high risk for hereditary disease before genetic testing, prospective identification of FH-deficient leiomyomas is of limited clinical benefit in screening unselected patients because of the relatively high incidence of somatic mutations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15320979 and 01475185
Volume :
40
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bcd9cb203e775b61b9a970afd63c30a8