Ovarian endometrioid carcinomas (OEC) of low grade have characteristic morphologic features, but high-grade tumors can mimic high-grade serous and undifferentiated carcinomas. We reviewed tumors ...initially diagnosed as OEC to determine whether a combination of pathologic and immunohistochemical features can improve histologic subclassification. Tumors initially diagnosed as OEC were reviewed using World Health Organization criteria. We also noted the presence of associated confirmatory endometrioid features (CEFs)(i) squamous metaplasia; (ii) endometriosis; (iii) adenofibromatous background; and (iv) borderline endometrioid or mixed Mullerian component. A tissue microarray was constructed from 27 representative tumors with CEF and 14 without CEF, and sections were stained for WT-1, p16, and p53. Of 109 tumors initially diagnosed as OEC, 76 (70%) tumors were classified as OEC. The median patient age was 55 years, and 75% of patients were younger than 60 years. Ninety-two percent presented with disease confined to the pelvis, and 87% of tumors were unilateral. The median tumor size was 11.8 cm. Only 3% of tumors were high grade (grade 3of 3). Eighty percent of cases had at least 1 CEF, and 59% had at least 2 CEFs. Eleven percent overexpressed p16, 0% overexpressed p53, and 3% expressed WT-1. Only 10% of patients died of disease at last follow-up. Thirty-three (33) tumors, or 30% of tumors originally classified as endometrioid, were reclassified as serous carcinoma (OSC). The median patient age was 54.5 years, and 59% of patients were younger than 60 years of age. Only 27% had disease confined to the pelvis at presentation, 52% of tumors were unilateral, and the median tumor size was 8 cm. Associated squamous differentiation, endometrioid adenofibroma, and endometrioid or mixed Mullerian borderline tumor (CEFs) were not present in any case, but 6% of patients had endometriosis. Approximately one half of the reclassified OSC demonstrated SET-pattern morphology (combinations of glandular, cribriform, solid, and transitional cell–like architecture) and were immunophenotypically indistinguishable from OSCs with papillary architecture. Sixty percent of OSC overexpressed p16, 50% overexpressed p53, and 82% expressed WT-1. At last follow-up, 52% had died of disease. Compared with OSC, OEC patients more frequently presented below 60 years of age (P=0.046), had low-stage tumors (P<0.001), were more frequently unilateral (P<0.001), more frequently had synchronous endometrial endometrioid carcinomas (P<0.001); and had no evidence of disease at last follow-up (P<0.001). Their tumors were of lower grade (P<0.001), had more CEFs (P<0.001), and less frequently overexpressed p16 and p53 (P=0.003 and P<0.001, respectively) and less frequently expressed WT-1 (P<0.001). This analysis emphasizes the diagnostic value of CEFs, the presence of a low-grade gland-forming endometrioid component, and WT-1 negativity, as valid, clinically relevant criteria for a diagnosis of OEC. Glandular and/or cribriform architecture alone may be seen in both OECs and OSCs and are therefore not informative of diagnosis. Further study is needed to elaborate the characteristics of the exceedingly rare high-grade OEC.
Gastric-type endocervical adenocarcinoma (GAS) is a recently described diagnostic entity originally characterized as a tumor with (1) voluminous cytoplasm that is (2) clear or pale eosinophilic, and ...(3) cells showing distinct cell borders. Since the initial tumor description there has been accumulating experience that the neoplasm, in addition to classic features, may show a wide spectrum of morphologic appearances. This paper describes and illustrates cases of GAS with focal or diffuse findings that includedensely eosinophilic cytoplasm, foamy cytoplasm, goblet cells, glands with elongated, stratified nuclei, glands with small cuboidal cells, glands with flattened cells, papillary growth, single cell infiltration and infiltration with microcystic elongated and fragmented pattern. All these patterns may bring up a differential diagnosis with other cervical malignancies such as usual, intestinal, endometrioid, clear cell, serous, and mesonephric adenocarcinoma. The paper describes the patterns of immunostaining of respective lesions that may aid in the diagnostic process and summarizes the main points of the differential diagnosis. GAS is associated with somatic and germline STK11 mutations and TP53 mutations but is invariably negative for human papilloma virus when tumor only is tested. It shows variation in incidence between countries. Awareness of the spectrum of morphologic appearances in GAS is important for accurate and confident diagnosis. Correct identification of GAS is important due to its propensity for ovarian and other distant metastases, markedly worse prognosis as compared with usual endocervical adenocarcinoma, and its relative resistance to chemotherapy.
Ovarian metastases from endocervical adenocarcinomas (EAs) are rare but well-described. Silva Pattern A tumors have been reported to pose essentially no risk of lymph node metastases or recurrence. ...We describe a cohort of patients with Silva Pattern A EAs with ovarian metastases, as well as involvement of other sites. Eight pattern A EAs with ovarian metastases (4 synchronous, 4 metachronous) were identified from our institution's pathologic archives (2008-2021). Clinicopathologic and molecular features for each case were recorded. All patients were treated by hysterectomy; in each case, the entire tumor was submitted for histologic evaluation. The synchronous metastases were all clinically suspected to be ovarian primary tumors; EAs with metachronous ovarian involvement were confined to the uterus at initial diagnosis, with ovarian metastasis occurring 5 to 171 months after hysterectomy. Morphologically, all tumors were predominantly gland-forming, 5/8 (63%) displayed prominent mucinous differentiation, and 5/8 (63%) involved the corpus. All EAs were either noninvasive (exophytic/papillary/more complex than adenocarcinoma in situ) or showed nondestructive cervical stromal invasion to a depth of 5 mm or less. In the 5 tumors tested by next-generation sequencing, ARID1A, GNAS, and KRAS mutations were detected in 2 (40%), 3 (60%), and 4 (80%) cases, respectively. All 6 patients with follow-up (range, 32 to 181 mo; median, 99.5 mo) had at least 1 recurrence. All but one are without evident disease at last clinical assessment. In an otherwise typical Silva Pattern A EA, corpus involvement, mucinous differentiation, and certain gene mutations may be associated with risk for synchronous or metachronous ovarian metastases.
Invasive stratified mucin-producing carcinoma (ISMC) is a recently described tumor with similar morphology to the stratified mucin-producing intraepithelial lesion. Stratified mucin-producing ...intraepithelial lesion and ISMC likely arise from human papillomavirus (HPV)-infected reserve cells in the cervical transformation zone that retain their pluripotential ability to differentiate into various architectural and cytologic patterns. This is important, as small studies have suggested that ISMC may be a morphologic pattern associated with more aggressive behavior than usual HPV-associated adenocarcinoma. We sought to study the morphologic spectrum of this entity and its associations with other, more conventional patterns of HPV-associated carcinomas. Full slide sets from 52 cases of ISMC were reviewed by an international panel of gynecologic pathologists and classified according to the new International Endocervical Criteria and Classification system. Tumors were categorized as ISMC if they demonstrated stromal invasion by solid nests of neoplastic cells with at least focal areas of mucin stratified throughout the entire thickness, as opposed to conventional tall columnar cells with luminal gland formation. Tumors comprising pure ISMC, and those mixed with other morphologic patterns, were included in the analysis. Twenty-nine pure ISMCs (56%) and 23 ISMCs mixed with other components (44%) were identified. Other components included 13 cases of usual-type adenocarcinoma, 6 adenosquamous carcinoma, 3 mucinous-type adenocarcinoma, 1 high-grade neuroendocrine carcinoma. ISMC displayed architectural diversity (insular, lumen-forming, solid, papillary, trabecular, micropapillary, single cells) and variable cytologic appearance (eosinophilic cytoplasm, cytoplasmic clearing, histiocytoid features, glassy cell-like features, signet ring-like features, bizarre nuclei, squamoid differentiation). Awareness of the spectrum of morphologies in ISMC is important for accurate and reproducible diagnosis so that future studies to determine the clinical significance of ISMC can be conducted.
Adenosarcoma can mimic high-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma with ZC3H7B-BCOR fusion that may show entrapped glands and often exhibits diffuse BCOR expression. We encountered diffuse BCOR expression ...in rare adenosarcomas and sought to define its frequency among a larger cohort of these tumors. BCOR immunohistochemistry was performed on archival formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tumor tissue in 13 of 14 adenosarcomas with and without stromal overgrowth arising in the uterus or ovary. The staining intensity and percentage of positive tumor nuclei in the mesenchymal component were evaluated. Eleven cases with sufficient tumoral tissue were subjected to fluorescence in situ hybridization for the detection of BCOR, BCORL1, NUTM1, ZC3H7B, and JAZF1 rearrangement. Three cases were subjected to targeted RNA sequencing. BCOR was expressed in 9 of 13 (70%) tumors, including 6 with and 3 without stromal overgrowth. Moderate to strong staining in >70% of cells was seen throughout in 1 low-grade and 6 high-grade tumors, 5 of which had stromal overgrowth. No staining was seen in 3 low-grade and 1 high-grade tumors with stromal overgrowth. One tumor demonstrating extensive sex cord-like differentiation and diffuse BCOR expression harbored JAZF1 and BCORL1 rearrangements. No BCOR or BCORL1 rearrangement was identified in the remaining tumors. BCOR expression is seen in most adenosarcomas with and without stromal overgrowth. BCORL1 rearrangement is seen in rare tumors with diffuse BCOR expression. Assessment of BCOR or BCORL1 rearrangement status is required in adenosarcomas demonstrating BCOR expression.
Although 2014 World Health Organization criteria require unequivocal glandular and squamous differentiation for a diagnosis of cervical adenosquamous carcinoma, in practice, adenosquamous carcinoma ...diagnoses are often made in tumors that lack unequivocal squamous and/or glandular differentiation. Considering the ambiguous etiologic, morphological, and clinical features and outcomes associated with adenosquamous carcinomas, we sought to redefine these tumors. We reviewed slides from 59 initially diagnosed adenosquamous carcinomas (including glassy cell carcinoma and related lesions) to confirm an adenosquamous carcinoma diagnosis only in the presence of unequivocal malignant glandular and squamous differentiation. Select cases underwent immunohistochemical profiling as well as human papillomavirus (HPV) testing by in situ hybridization. Of the 59 cases originally classified as adenosquamous carcinomas, 34 retained their adenosquamous carcinoma diagnosis, 9 were reclassified as pure invasive stratified mucin-producing carcinomas, 10 as invasive stratified mucin-producing carcinomas with other components (such as HPV-associated mucinous, usual-type, or adenosquamous carcinomas), and 4 as HPV-associated usual or mucinous adenocarcinomas with benign-appearing squamous metaplasia. Two glassy cell carcinomas were reclassified as poorly differentiated usual-type carcinomas based on morphology and immunophenotype. There were significant immunophenotypic differences between adenosquamous carcinomas and pure invasive stratified mucin-producing carcinomas with regard to HPV (p < 0.0001), PAX8 (p = 0.038; more in adenosquamous carcinoma), p40 (p < 0.0001; more in adenosquamous carcinoma), p63 (p = 0.0018; more in adenosquamous carcinoma) and MUC6 (p < 0.0001; less in adenosquamous carcinoma), HNF-1beta (p = 0.0023), vimentin (p = 0.0003), p53 (p = 0.0004), and CK7 (p = 0.0002) expression. Survival outcomes were similar between all groups. Adenosquamous carcinomas should be diagnosed only in the presence of unequivocal malignant glandular and squamous differentiation. The two putative glassy cell carcinomas studied did not meet our criteria for adenosquamous carcinoma, and categorizing them as such should be reconsidered.
Elevated production of collagen-rich extracellular matrix is a hallmark of cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and a central driver of cancer aggressiveness. Here we find that proline, a highly ...abundant amino acid in collagen proteins, is newly synthesized from glutamine in CAFs to make tumour collagen in breast cancer xenografts. PYCR1 is a key enzyme for proline synthesis and highly expressed in the stroma of breast cancer patients and in CAFs. Reducing PYCR1 levels in CAFs is sufficient to reduce tumour collagen production, tumour growth and metastatic spread in vivo and cancer cell proliferation in vitro. Both collagen and glutamine-derived proline synthesis in CAFs are epigenetically upregulated by increased pyruvate dehydrogenase-derived acetyl-CoA levels. PYCR1 is a cancer cell vulnerability and potential target for therapy; therefore, our work provides evidence that targeting PYCR1 may have the additional benefit of halting the production of a pro-tumorigenic extracellular matrix. Our work unveils new roles for CAF metabolism to support pro-tumorigenic collagen production.
Advanced-stage endometrial cancers have limited treatment options and poor prognosis, highlighting the need to understand genetic drivers of therapeutic vulnerabilities and/or prognostic predictors. ...We examined whether prospective molecular characterization of recurrent and metastatic disease can reveal grade and histology-specific differences, facilitating enrollment onto clinical trials.
We integrated prospective clinical sequencing and IHC data with detailed clinical and treatment histories for 197 tumors, profiled by MSK-IMPACT from 189 patients treated at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.
Patients had advanced disease and high-grade histologies, with poor progression-free survival on first-line therapy (PFS
). When matched for histology and grade, the genomic landscape was similar to that of primary untreated disease profiled by TCGA. Using multiple complementary genomic and mutational signature-based methods, we identified patients with microsatellite instability (MSI), even when standard MMR protein IHC staining failed. Tumor and matched normal DNA sequencing identified rare pathogenic germline mutations in
and
. Clustering the pattern of DNA copy-number alterations revealed a novel subset characterized by heterozygous losses across the genome and significantly worse outcomes compared with other clusters (median PFS
9.6 months vs. 17.0 and 17.4 months;
= 0.006). Of the 68% of patients harboring potentially actionable mutations, 27% were enrolled to matched clinical trials, of which 47% of these achieved clinical benefit.
Prospective clinical sequencing of advanced endometrial cancer can help refine prognosis and aid treatment decision making by simultaneously detecting microsatellite status, germline predisposition syndromes, and potentially actionable mutations. A small overall proportion of all patients tested received investigational, genomically matched therapy as part of clinical trials.
Invasive stratified mucinous carcinoma (iSMC) has been suggested to represent an aggressive subtype of endocervical adenocarcinoma. We sought to investigate the outcomes of iSMC and determine which ...clinical and pathologic parameters may influence the prognosis. Slides from 52 cases of iSMC were collected and classified as followspure iSMC (>90% of the entire tumor) and iSMC mixed with other human papillomavirus–associated adenocarcinoma components (miSMC) (>10%, but <90% of the entire tumor). Clinical and pathologic parameters were evaluated and compared with overall survival (OS) and recurrence-free survival (RFS). One third of patients with iSMC presented with lymph node metastases (LNM) and 25% developed local recurrences, whereas 4 (7.7%) developed distant recurrences. 29 cases (55.8%) were pure iSMC, whereas 23 cases (44.23%) were miSMC. OS was 74.7% in pure iSMC versus 85.2% in miSMC (P=0.287). RFS was 56.5% in pure iSMC and 72.9% in miSMC (P=0.185). At 5 years, OS in stage I was 88.9% versus stage II to IV 30% (P=0.004), whereas RFS in stage I was 73.9% versus stage II to IV 38.1% (P=0.02). OS was influenced by International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage (P=0.013), tumor size (P=0.02), LNM (P=0.015), and local recurrence (P=0.022), whereas RFS was influenced by FIGO stage (P=0.031), tumor size (P=0.001), local recurrence (P=0.009), LNM (P=0.008), and type of surgical treatment (P=0.044). iSMC is an aggressive cervical tumor biologically different from other human papillomavirus–associated adenocarcinomas due to the propensity for LNM, local/distant recurrence. FIGO stage, tumor size, LNM, and presence of local/pelvic recurrences are determinants of outcome in iSMCs.