Abstract
Poromas, and their malignant counterparts, porocarcinomas, harbor recurrent translocations involving YAP1-MAML2, YAP1-NUTM1, and infrequently WWTR1-NUTM1; YAP1-NUTM1 being the most common in porocarcinomas. NUT immunohistochemistry (IHC) can be used to identify NUTM1-translocated tumors. This study sought to investigate potential novel NUTM1-fusion partners among NUT IHC-positive poromas and porocarcinomas. Thirteen NUT IHC-positive poroid tumors (four poromas and nine porocarcinomas) were identified within a multi-institutional international cohort. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) assessed for NUTM1 fusion partners. NGS detected a NUTM1 fusion in 12 of 13 cases: YAP1-NUTM1 (11/12 cases) and WWTR1-NUTM1 (1/12 cases). Two of the cases (2/12) with NUTM1 fusion were not called by the NGS algorithm but had at least one read-spanning YAP1-NUTM1 break point upon manual review. A NUTM1 fusion was not identified in one case; however, the sample had low RNA quality. The following fusion events were identified: YAP1 exon 4::NUTM1 exon 3 in six cases, YAP1 exon 6::NUTM1 exon 2 in one case, YAP1 exon 3::NUTM1 exon 3 in three cases, WWTR1 exon 3::NUTM1 exon 3 in one case, and YAP1 exon 8::NUTM1 exon 3 fusion in one case. While no novel NUTM1 fusion partners were identified within our cohort, 12 of 13 cases had discoverable NUTM1 fusions; YAP1-NUTM1 fusion was detected in 11 cases (92%) and WWTR1-NUTM1 in 1 case (8%). These data corroborate findings from other recent investigations and further substantiate the utility of NUT IHC in diagnosing a subset of poroid neoplasms. In addition, two of our cases harbored fusions of YAP1 exon 6 to NUTM1 exon 3 and YAP1 exon 8 to NUTM1 exon 2, which have not been reported before in poroid neoplasms and indicate novel break points of YAP1.
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