Abstract

The majority of papillary thyroid carcinoma is indolent and associated with long-term survival. The columnar cell variant, however, is a rare subtype that is variable in biological behavior; some are clinically aggressive, whereas others are more clinically indolent. Tumor size, tumor circumscription, and encapsulation may influence the behavior of columnar cell carcinomas. Other variables including genetic changes and putative biomarkers associated with malignant growth have not been thoroughly examined in these neoplasms. In this study, nine cases of columnar cell variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma from three institutions were classified as clinically indolent or aggressive based on pathological features, clinical history, and outcome. Indolent tumors were typically small, circumscribed or encapsulated, and from younger female patients, whereas aggressive tumors were large, locally aggressive, associated with regional and distant metastasis, and from older male patients. The missense mutation, V600E in the BRAF oncogene (BRAFV600E), was detected in three of nine of cases, of which two were clinically aggressive. Immunohistochemical evaluation of neoplasia-associated markers showed increased nuclear cyclin D1 expression, elevated Ki-67 proliferation indices, and predominantly weak nuclear p53 staining in both indolent and aggressive tumors. Expression of β-catenin was largely restricted to a membranous pattern in both tumor types. Cytoplasmic expression of bcl-2 was overall mildly reduced in indolent neoplasms. Nuclear expression of estrogen and progesterone receptors was increased in both indolent and aggressive neoplasms, but was without sex- or age-related differences; however, whereas progesterone receptor expression was diffuse and strong in clinically indolent carcinomas, its expression was diminished in aggressive neoplasms. Recognition of the clinicopathological characteristics and the molecular and immunophenotypic features of the columnar cell variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma may aid in characterizing neoplasms that behave indolently or aggressively.

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