Renal Cell Carcinoma in Tuberous Sclerosis Complex

Ping Yang(Sun Yat-sen University), Kristine M. Cornejo, Peter M. Sadow, Liang Cheng(Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis), Ming‐Sheng Wang(Indiana University School of Medicine), Yu Xiao(Peking Union Medical College Hospital), Zhong Jiang(University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School), Esther Oliva, Sergiusz Jóźwiak(Children's Memorial Health Institute), Robert L. Nussbaum(University of California, San Francisco), Adam S. Feldman, Elahna Paul(Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center), Elizabeth A. Thiele(Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center), Jane Yu(Indiana University School of Medicine), Elizabeth P. Henske(Indiana University School of Medicine), David J. Kwiatkowski(Indiana University School of Medicine), Robert H. Young, Chin‐Lee Wu
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology
May 15, 2014
Cited by 274Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) occurs in 2% to 4% of patients with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). Previous reports have noted a variety of histologic appearances in these cancers, but the full spectrum of morphologic and molecular features has not been fully elucidated. We encountered 46 renal epithelial neoplasms from 19 TSC patients and analyzed their clinical, pathologic, and molecular features, enabling separation of these 46 tumors into 3 groups. The largest subset of tumors (n=24) had a distinct morphologic, immunologic, and molecular profile, including prominent papillary architecture and uniformly deficient succinate dehydrogenase subunit B (SDHB) expression prompting the novel term "TSC-associated papillary RCC (PRCC)." The second group (n=15) were morphologically similar to a hybrid oncocytic/chromophobe tumor (HOCT), whereas the last 7 renal epithelial neoplasms of group 3 remained unclassifiable. The TSC-associated PRCCs had prominent papillary architecture lined by clear cells with delicate eosinophilic cytoplasmic thread-like strands that occasionally appeared more prominent and aggregated to form eosinophilic globules. All 24 (100%) of these tumors were International Society of Urological Pathology (ISUP) nucleolar grade 2 or 3 with mostly basally located nuclei. Tumor cells from 17 of 24 TSC-associated PRCCs showed strong, diffuse labeling for carbonic anhydrase IX (100%), CK7 (94%), vimentin (88%), and CD10 (83%) and were uniformly negative for SDHB, TFE3, and AMACR. Gains of chromosomes 7 and 17 were found in 2 tumors, whereas chromosome 3p deletion and TFE3 translocations were not detected. In this study, we reported a sizable cohort of renal tumors seen in TSC and were able to identify them as different morphotypes, which may help to expand the morphologic spectrum of TSC-associated RCC.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis