High Incidence of Chromosome 1 Abnormalities in a Series of 27 Renal Oncocytomas: Cytogenetic and Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization Studies

Gladell P. Paner(Loyola University Medical Center), Valerie Lindgren(Loyola University Medical Center), Kris Jacobson(Loyola University Medical Center), Kathleen Harrison(Loyola University Medical Center), Ying Cao(Loyola University Medical Center), Steve C. Campbell(Loyola University Medical Center), Robert C. Flanigan(Loyola University Medical Center), Maria M. Picken(Loyola University Medical Center)
Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine
January 1, 2007
Cited by 38

Abstract

Abstract Context. —It has recently been shown by cytogenetics that there is a high incidence of chromosome 1 abnormalities in renal oncocytomas. Objective. —To confirm the cytogenetic results by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis. Design. —Nine additional cytogenetic analyses were added to those reported in our recent study, with a total of 27 tumors studied, which makes it the largest series of renal oncocytomas studied to date by cytogenetics and/or FISH. We used the LSI 1p36/LSI 1q25 Dual Color Probe Set to make the analyses. Results. —In this study, combined cytogenetics and FISH showed loss of chromosome arm 1p1 in 48% of renal oncocytomas. By FISH, deletion of 1p36.3 was observed in 59% of renal oncocytomas, whereas by cytogenetics, abnormality in chromosome 1 was seen in 32% of tumors. However, the incidence of chromosome 1 abnormalities among 9 bilateral tumors was much higher than in single tumors (88% vs 28%, respectively). Loss of only the 1p36.3 site occurred in 2 renal oncocytomas with translocation of chromosome 1, as shown by cytogenetics. Concordance between the 2 techniques, when they were used simultaneously to detect chromosome 1p1 abnormality, was 82%. Conclusions. —This study further confirmed our prior results demonstrating the widespread occurrence of chromosome 1 abnormalities in renal oncocytomas. Although no abnormalities in chromosome 1 in tumors with normal karyotypes were detected by FISH using the current set of probes, a much higher incidence of such abnormalities was found in bilateral tumors, suggesting that genetic alterations related to the development of renal oncocytoma reside in this region.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis