Abstract

Most anaplastic thyroid carcinomas (ATCs) arise from papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC). This process is also called anaplastic transformation, and the morphological harbingers of this phenomenon in nodal recurrence have not been assessed systematically. For this reason, the current study focused on features of 10 PTCs with regional lymph node recurrence that was accompanied with disease progression due to anaplastic transformation in at least one of the nodal recurrences. The findings of additional 19 PTCs which recurred without anaplastic transformation after ≥ 10 years of follow-up served as the control group. There were no clinicopathological differences between the two groups at initial surgery including age, gender, tumor size, lymph node metastasis, distant metastasis, extrathyroidal extension, histologic subtype, and treatment. The median time from the initial thyroid surgery to anaplastic transformation in the nodal recurrence was 106 months (range 6 to 437 months). Mutational analyses showed recurrent PTCs with anaplastic transformation had a high prevalence of BRAFV600E mutation (8/9) and TERT promoter mutation (9/9), both of which were detected in primary tumors. PIK3CAH1047R mutation was detected in one case. No case had RAS mutation. Nineteen recurrent PTCs without anaplastic transformation harbored BRAFV600E mutation and seventeen of these had TERT promoter mutation. Unlike primary tumors with subsequent nodal anaplastic transformation, TERT promoter mutation was only present in the metastatic nodal recurrence from 4 patients without transformation. No patients had neither high-grade features (necrosis and increased mitotic activity) nor solid/insular growth or hobnail cell features in their primary tumors. In the group of patients with transformation, 3 had solid/insular growth in the lymph node metastasis at the time of primary tumor resection (one displaying nuclear features of PTC and solid growth with increased mitotic activity, one with insular component consistent with poorly differentiated carcinoma component, and one displaying nuclear features of PTC and solid growth), and additional 2 patients had solid/insular growth with no high-grade features or poorly differentiated carcinoma component at the time of subsequent nodal recurrence prior to anaplastic transformation. Hobnail cell features were exclusively seen in subsequent metastatic lymph nodes prior to anaplastic transformation. The control group lacked solid/insular growth and hobnail cell features in the metastatic nodal disease. Aberrant p53 expression and loss of TTF-1 featured tumor components with anaplastic transformation. This series identified a subset of recurrent PTCs with TERT promoter mutation was prone to undergo anaplastic transformation, and that solid/insular growth and hobnail cell features were morphological predictors of anaplastic transformation in the nodal recurrence.

Highlights

  • Rare, anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC), called undifferentiated thyroid carcinoma, has the worst prognosis among thyroid cancers and accounts for 14–39% of thyroid cancer-related death [1]

  • We evaluated the clinicopathological and molecular features of recurrent papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) which transformed into ATCs in the metastatic lymph nodes

  • We found no difference in clinicopathological features between recurrent PTCs with and without transformation, which indicated that these groups were not significantly dissimilar at the time of their primary tumor stage

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Summary

Introduction

Anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (ATC), called undifferentiated thyroid carcinoma, has the worst prognosis among thyroid cancers and accounts for 14–39% of thyroid cancer-related death [1]. Endocrine Pathology (2021) 32:347–356 or from a pre-existing well-differentiated thyroid cancer after an accumulation of genetic alterations [2]. Much has been learned regarding various mechanisms underlying anaplastic transformation by comparing characteristics of ATC and papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) co-existing in the same tumor [3,4,5,6,7,8]. Recent next-generation sequencing (NGS) techniques have revealed the genomic landscape of PTC and ATC [9,10,11]. RET gene rearrangements are observed in up to 43% of PTCs, but are uncommon in ATCs [2, 12]

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