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Clinical patterns and genomic profiling of recurrent ‘ultra-low risk’ endometrial cancer

Authors :
Noah Z. Feit
Ginger J. Gardner
Jennifer J. Mueller
Robert A. Soslow
Karen Cadoo
Ana Paula Martins Sebastiao
Nadeem R. Abu-Rustum
Britta Weigelt
Marina Stasenko
Simon S K Lee
Mario M. Leitao
Kaled M. Alektiar
Edaise M da Silva
Pier Selenica
Cassandra Shepherd
Source :
International Journal of Gynecologic Cancer. 30:717-723
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
BMJ, 2020.

Abstract

ObjectiveDespite good prognosis for patients with low-risk endometrial cancer, a small subset of women with low-grade/low-stage endometrial cancer experience disease recurrence and death. The aim of this study was to characterize clinical features and mutational profiles of recurrent, low-grade, non-myoinvasive, ‘ultra-low risk’ endometrioid endometrial adenocarcinomas.MethodsWe retrospectively identified patients with International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage IA endometrioid endometrial cancers who underwent primary surgery at our institution, between January 2009 and February 2017, with follow-up of ≥12 months. ‘Ultra-low risk’ was defined as FIGO tumor grade 1, non-myoinvasive, and lacking lymphovascular space invasion. Tumor-normal profiling using massively parallel sequencing targeting 468 genes was performed. Microsatellite instability was assessed using MSIsensor. DNA mismatch repair (MMR) protein proficiency was determined by immunohistochemistry.ResultsA total of 486 patients with ultra-low risk endometrioid endometrial cancers were identified: 14 (2.9%) of 486 patients developed a recurrence. Median follow-up for non-recurrent endometrioid endometrial cancers: 34 (range 12–116) months; for recurrent endometrioid endometrial cancers: 50.5 (range 20–116) months. Patients with recurrent disease were older, had lower body mass index, and were most commonly non-White (p=0.025, pPTEN and PIK3CA mutations were present in both groups. Exon 3 CTNNB1 hotspot mutations were found in 4/9 (44%) recurrent and 8/27 (30%) non-recurrent (p=0.44).ConclusionsPatients diagnosed with ultra-low risk endometrioid endometrial cancers have an overall excellent prognosis. However, in our study, 2.9% of patients with no identifiable clinical or pathologic risk factors developed recurrence. Further work is warranted to elucidate the mechanism for recurrence in this population.

Details

ISSN :
15251438 and 1048891X
Volume :
30
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Gynecologic Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d3dff689eb9a660815b2b31a9b7480be
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/ijgc-2020-001241