4.4 Article

Specific Genomic Alterations in High-Grade Pulmonary Neuroendocrine Tumours with Carcinoid Morphology

Journal

NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 111, Issue 1-2, Pages 158-169

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000506292

Keywords

Lung neuroendocrine tumour; Carcinoids; High-grade tumour; Comparative genomic hybridization; RB1

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Introduction: High-grade lung neuroendocrine tumours with carcinoid morphology have been recently reported; they may represent the thoracic counterparts of grade 3 digestive neuroendocrine tumours. We aimed to study their genetic landscape including analysis of tumoral heterogeneity. Methods: Eleven patients with high-grade (>20% Ki-67 and/or >10 mitoses) lung neuroendocrine tumours with a carcinoid morphology were included. We analysed copy number variations, somatic mutations, and protein expression in 16 tumour samples (2 samples were available for 5 patients allowing us to study spatial and temporal heterogeneity). Results: Genomic patterns were heterogeneous ranging from quiet to tetraploid, heavily rearranged genomes. Oncogene mutations were rare and most genetic alterations targeted tumour suppressor genes. Chromosomes 11 (7/11), 3 (6/11), 13 (4/11), and 6-17 (3/11) were the most frequently lost. Altered tumour suppressor genes were common to both carcinoids and neuroendocrine carcinomas, involving different pathways including chromatin remodelling (KMT2A, ARID1A, SETD2, SMARCA2, BAP1, PBRM1, KAT6A), DNA repair (MEN1, POLQ, ATR, MLH1, ATM), cell cycle (RB1, TP53, CDKN2A), cell adhesion (LATS2, CTNNB1, GSK3B) and metabolism (VHL). Comparative spatial/temporal analyses confirmed that these tumours emerged from clones of lower aggressivity but revealed that they were genetically heterogeneous accumulating neuroendocrine carcinoma-like genetic alterations through progression such as TP53/RB1 alterations. Conclusion: These data confirm the importance of chromatin remodelling genes in pulmonary carcinoids and highlight the potential role of TP53 and RB1 to drive the transformation in more aggressive high-grade tumours.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available