A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Immunohistochemical and genetic analysis of respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartomas and seromucinous hamartomas: are they precursor lesions to sinonasal low-grade tubulopapillary adenocarcinomas?




AuthorsBaněčková M., Michal M., Laco J., Leivo I., Ptáková N., Horáková M., Michal M., Skálová A.

PublisherW.B. Saunders

Publication year2020

Journal:Human Pathology

Journal name in sourceHuman Pathology

Volume97

First page 94

Last page102

Number of pages9

ISSN0046-8177

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.humpath.2019.09.018


Abstract

Respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartoma (REAH) and seromucinous hamartoma (SH) are rare tumor-like lesions of the nasal cavity, paranasal sinuses, and nasopharynx. The pathogenesis of REAH/SH is still unclear. Neoplastic proliferation, chronic mechanical irritation, inflammation, or possible embryological tissue misplacement are speculated as possible mechanisms of their development. Low-grade tubulopapillary adenocarcinoma (LGTA) is a rare variant of nonsalivary, nonintestinal type sinonasal adenocarcinoma. The aim of this study was to evaluate the immunohistochemical and genetic profiles of 10 cases of REAH/SH, with serous, mucinous, and respiratory components evaluated separately and to compare these findings with the features of 9 cases of LGTA. All cases of REAH/SH and LGTA were analyzed immunohistochemically with a cocktail of mucin antigens (MUC1, MUC2, MUC4, MUC5AC, MUC6) and with epithelial (CK7, CK20, CDX2, SATB2) and myoepithelial markers (S100 protein, p63, SOX10). The next-generation sequencing assay was performed using FusionPlex Solid Tumor Kit (ArcherDx) in 10 cases of REAH/SH, and the EGFR-ZNF267 gene fusion was detected in 1 of them. Two female REAH/SH cases were assessed for the presence of clonality. Using the human androgen receptor assay, 1 case was proved to be clonal. The serous component of REAH/SH was positive for CK7/MUC1 and SOX10 similarly to LGTA. Although REAH/SH and LGTA are histopathologically and clinically separate entities, the overlap in their morphological and immunohistochemical profiles suggests that REAH/SH might be a precursor lesion of LGTA.



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