Low frequency of molecular changes and tumor recurrence in inverted papillomas of the urinary tract

Eiber, Matthias and van Oers, Johanna M. M. and Zwarthoff, Ellen C. and van der Kwast, Theo H. and Ulrich, Oehler and Helpap, Burkhard and Stoerkel, Stephan and Blaszyk, Hagen and Cheville, John and Sauter, Guido and Wild, Peter J. and Stoehr, Robert and Hofstaedter, Ferdinand and Hartmann, Arndt (2007) Low frequency of molecular changes and tumor recurrence in inverted papillomas of the urinary tract. The American journal of surgical pathology 31 (6), pp. 938-946.

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Abstract

AIM: Inverted papilloma (IP) of the urinary tract can be difficult to distinguish from noninvasive urothelial carcinoma with prominent inverted growth pattern (invNIUC). Ancillary markers may help to resolve such cases and clarify the reported malignant potential of some IPs. METHODS: Eighty-nine urothelial lesions initially diagnosed as IP were reviewed by 4 experienced urologic pathologists and studied immunohistochemically (Ki67, p53, CK20, MSH2, MLH1, and MSH6). Mutations of the FGFR3 gene, deletions (loss of heterozygosity) of 9p, 9q, and 17p, microsatellite instability, and elevated microsatellite instability at selected tetranucleotides were also analyzed. RESULTS: Considerable interobserver variability in histopathologic diagnoses was noticed. Only 62 (69.7%) initial diagnoses were confirmed by the review pathologists whereas 23 tumors (25.8%) were redefined as invNIUC. Molecular analyses revealed infrequent alterations in IPs, including microsatellite instability (1.8%), elevated microsatellite instability at selected tetranucleotides (13.2%), FGFR3 mutations (9.8%), 9p deletions (3.9%), 9q deletions (13.2%), 17p deletions (5.1%), nuclear p53 accumulation (18.9%), and aberrant immunostaining for MSH2 (5.8%), MLH1 (11.8%), and MSH6 (3.8%). IP and invNIUC differed in FGFR3 mutations and Ki-67 labeling index (P<0.001 each), and 9q loss of heterozygosity (P=0.03). There were fewer recurrences in IP (5.4%) compared with invNIUC (40.9%; P<0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: IP is a benign lesion that lacks specific genetic alterations found in exophytic noninvasive papillary urothelial tumors. These lesions could be reactive in nature, perhaps secondary to chronic inflammation or a neoplastic process that lack specific genetic alterations. Nevertheless given the clinical and molecular data of this study a conservative clinical approach is appropriate.

Item Type:Article
Institutions: Medicine > Lehrstuhl für Pathologie
Identification Number:
ValueType
17527084PubMed ID
10.1097/01.pas.0000249448.13466.75DOI
Classification:
NotationType
AdolescentMESH
AdultMESH
AgedMESH
Aged, 80 and overMESH
Carcinoma/pathologyMESH
DNA Mutational AnalysisMESH
Diagnosis, DifferentialMESH
HumansMESH
ImmunohistochemistryMESH
Loss of HeterozygosityMESH
Microsatellite RepeatsMESH
Middle AgedMESH
Neoplasm Recurrence, Local/pathologyMESH
Observer VariationMESH
Papilloma, Inverted/pathologyMESH
Polymerase Chain ReactionMESH
Receptor, Fibroblast Growth Factor, Type 3/geneticsMESH
Tumor Markers, Biological/analysisMESH
Urologic Neoplasms/pathologyMESH
Subjects:600 Technology > 610 Medical sciences Medicine
Status:Published
Refereed:Unknown
Created at the University of Regensburg:Unknown
Owner:Gertraud Kellers
Deposited On:22 Jun 2010 16:02
Last Modified:22 Jun 2010 16:02
Item ID:15529
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