Abstract

Parathyroid carcinoma (PC) is an extremely rare malignancy, accounting less than 1% of all parathyroid neoplasms, and an uncommon cause of primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT), characterized by an excessive secretion of parathyroid hormone (PTH) and severe hypercalcemia. As opposed to parathyroid hyperplasia and adenomas, PC is associated with a poor prognosis, due to a commonly unmanageable hypercalcemia, which accounts for death in the majority of cases, and an overall survival rate of 78-85% and 49-70% at 5 and 10 years after diagnosis, respectively. No definitively effective therapies for PC are currently available. The mainly employed treatment for PC is the surgical removal of tumoral gland(s). Post-surgical persistent or recurrent disease manifest in about 50% of patients. The comprehension of genetic and epigenetic bases and molecular pathways that characterize parathyroid carcinogenesis is important to distinguish malignant PCs from benign adenomas, and to identify specific targets for novel therapies. Germline heterozygote inactivating mutations of the CDC73 tumor suppressor gene, with somatic loss of heterozygosity at 1q31.2 locus, account for about 50-75% of familial cases; over 75% of sporadic PCs harbor biallelic somatic inactivation/loss of CDC73. Recurrent mutations of the PRUNE2 gene, a recurrent mutation in the ADCK1 gene, genetic amplification of the CCND1 gene, alterations of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR signaling pathway, and modifications of microRNA expression profile and gene promoter methylation pattern have all been detected in PC. Here, we review the current knowledge on gene mutations and epigenetic changes that have been associated with the development of PC, in both familial and sporadic forms of this malignancy.

Highlights

  • Specialty section: This article was submitted to Thyroid Endocrinology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Endocrinology

  • Parathyroid carcinoma (PC) is an extremely rare malignancy, accounting less than 1% of all parathyroid neoplasms, and an uncommon cause of primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT), characterized by an excessive secretion of parathyroid hormone (PTH) and severe hypercalcemia

  • Contrary to parathyroid hyperplasia and adenomas, PCs are associated with poor prognosis due to more severely elevated PTH, and higher, commonly unmanageable, hypercalcemia, which accounts for death in a majority of cases, with an overall survival rate of 78-85% and 49-70% at 5 and 10 years after diagnosis, respectively (2)

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Summary

Genetics and Epigenetics of Parathyroid Carcinoma

Francesca Marini 1,2, Francesca Giusti 1, Gaia Palmini 1, Giuliano Perigli 3, Roberto Santoro 3 and Maria Luisa Brandi 2*. As opposed to parathyroid hyperplasia and adenomas, PC is associated with a poor prognosis, due to a commonly unmanageable hypercalcemia, which accounts for death in the majority of cases, and an overall survival rate of 78-85% and 49-70% at 5 and 10 years after diagnosis, respectively. The comprehension of genetic and epigenetic bases and molecular pathways that characterize parathyroid carcinogenesis is important to distinguish malignant PCs from benign adenomas, and to identify specific targets for novel therapies. Germline heterozygote inactivating mutations of the CDC73 tumor suppressor gene, with somatic loss of heterozygosity at 1q31.2 locus, account for about 50-75% of familial cases; over 75% of sporadic PCs harbor biallelic somatic inactivation/loss of CDC73. We review the current knowledge on gene mutations and epigenetic changes that have been associated with the development of PC, in both familial and sporadic forms of this malignancy

PARATHYROID CARCINOMA
GENETICS OF PARATHYROID CARCINOMA
Heterozygote somatic mutations
PRUNE Gene
FLNA Gene
EPIGENETICS OF PARATHYROID CARCINOMA
DNA Methylation in Parathyroid Carcinoma
Histone Modifications in Parathyroid Carcinoma
Deregulated MicroRNAs in Parathyroid Carcinoma
Frequency in PCs
Not reported
Circular RNA Expression Profile in Parathyroid Carcinoma
Upregulated Upregulated
No studies available
Still unknown
CONCLUDING REMARKS
Findings
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Full Text
Paper version not known

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