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Stage IV Lung Carcinoids: Spectrum and Evolution of Proliferation Rate, Focusing on Variants with Elevated Proliferation Indices

The spectrum and evolution of proliferation rates in stage IV lung carcinoids is poorly defined. In particular, there are limited data on the prevalence and characteristics of tumors exceeding the standard upper proliferative criteria – as defined largely based on early-stage carcinoids – in metasta...

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Autores principales: Rekhtman, Natasha, Desmeules, Patrice, Litvak, Anna M., Pietanza, Maria C., Santos-Zabala, Maria Lauren, Ni, Ai, Montecalvo, Joseph, Chang, Jason C., Beras, Amanda, Preeshagul, Isabel R., Sabari, Joshua K., Rudin, Charles M., Ladanyi, Marc, Klimstra, David S., Travis, William D., Lai, Wei-Chu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6746332/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30923345
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41379-019-0248-2
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author Rekhtman, Natasha
Desmeules, Patrice
Litvak, Anna M.
Pietanza, Maria C.
Santos-Zabala, Maria Lauren
Ni, Ai
Montecalvo, Joseph
Chang, Jason C.
Beras, Amanda
Preeshagul, Isabel R.
Sabari, Joshua K.
Rudin, Charles M.
Ladanyi, Marc
Klimstra, David S.
Travis, William D.
Lai, Wei-Chu
author_facet Rekhtman, Natasha
Desmeules, Patrice
Litvak, Anna M.
Pietanza, Maria C.
Santos-Zabala, Maria Lauren
Ni, Ai
Montecalvo, Joseph
Chang, Jason C.
Beras, Amanda
Preeshagul, Isabel R.
Sabari, Joshua K.
Rudin, Charles M.
Ladanyi, Marc
Klimstra, David S.
Travis, William D.
Lai, Wei-Chu
author_sort Rekhtman, Natasha
collection PubMed
description The spectrum and evolution of proliferation rates in stage IV lung carcinoids is poorly defined. In particular, there are limited data on the prevalence and characteristics of tumors exceeding the standard upper proliferative criteria – as defined largely based on early-stage carcinoids – in metastatic setting. Sixty-six patients with stage IV lung carcinoids were identified, and all evaluable samples (n=132; mean 2 samples per patient) were analyzed for mitotic counts and Ki-67 rate. Clinicopathologic and genomic features associated with elevated proliferation rates (>10 mitoses per 2 mm(2) and/or >20% hot-spot Ki-67), and evolution of proliferation rates in serial specimens were analyzed. We found that mitoses and/or Ki-67 exceeded the standard criteria in 35 of 132 (27%) samples, primarily (31/35 cases) from metastatic sites. Although neuroendocrine neoplasms with >10 mitoses per 2 mm(2) are currently regarded as de facto neuroendocrine carcinomas, the notion that these cases are part of the spectrum of carcinoids was supported by 1) well-differentiated morphology, 2) conventional proliferation rates in other samples from same patient, 3) genetic characteristics, including the lack of RB1/TP53 alterations in all tested samples (n=19), and 4) median overall survival of 2.7 years, compared to <1 year survival of stage IV neuroendocrine carcinomas in the historic cohorts. In patients with matched primary/metastatic specimens (48 pairs), escalation of mitoses or Ki-67 by ≥10-points was observed in 35% of metastatic samples; clonal relationship in one pair with marked proliferative progression was confirmed by next-generation sequencing. Notably, escalation of proliferation rate was documented in a subset of metastases arising from resected typical carcinoids, emphasizing that the diagnosis of typical carcinoid in primary tumor does not assure low proliferation rate at metastatic sites. In conclusion, stage IV lung carcinoids frequently exceed the standard proliferative criteria established for primary tumors, and commonly exhibit proliferative escalation at metastatic sites. Despite the overlap of proliferation rates, these tumors show fundamental morphologic, genomic and clinical differences from neuroendocrine carcinomas, and should be classified separately from those tumors. Awareness of the increased proliferative spectrum in metastatic carcinoids is critical for their accurate diagnosis. Further studies are warranted to explore the impact of proliferation indices on prognosis and therapeutic responses of patients with metastatic carcinoids.
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spelling pubmed-67463322019-09-28 Stage IV Lung Carcinoids: Spectrum and Evolution of Proliferation Rate, Focusing on Variants with Elevated Proliferation Indices Rekhtman, Natasha Desmeules, Patrice Litvak, Anna M. Pietanza, Maria C. Santos-Zabala, Maria Lauren Ni, Ai Montecalvo, Joseph Chang, Jason C. Beras, Amanda Preeshagul, Isabel R. Sabari, Joshua K. Rudin, Charles M. Ladanyi, Marc Klimstra, David S. Travis, William D. Lai, Wei-Chu Mod Pathol Article The spectrum and evolution of proliferation rates in stage IV lung carcinoids is poorly defined. In particular, there are limited data on the prevalence and characteristics of tumors exceeding the standard upper proliferative criteria – as defined largely based on early-stage carcinoids – in metastatic setting. Sixty-six patients with stage IV lung carcinoids were identified, and all evaluable samples (n=132; mean 2 samples per patient) were analyzed for mitotic counts and Ki-67 rate. Clinicopathologic and genomic features associated with elevated proliferation rates (>10 mitoses per 2 mm(2) and/or >20% hot-spot Ki-67), and evolution of proliferation rates in serial specimens were analyzed. We found that mitoses and/or Ki-67 exceeded the standard criteria in 35 of 132 (27%) samples, primarily (31/35 cases) from metastatic sites. Although neuroendocrine neoplasms with >10 mitoses per 2 mm(2) are currently regarded as de facto neuroendocrine carcinomas, the notion that these cases are part of the spectrum of carcinoids was supported by 1) well-differentiated morphology, 2) conventional proliferation rates in other samples from same patient, 3) genetic characteristics, including the lack of RB1/TP53 alterations in all tested samples (n=19), and 4) median overall survival of 2.7 years, compared to <1 year survival of stage IV neuroendocrine carcinomas in the historic cohorts. In patients with matched primary/metastatic specimens (48 pairs), escalation of mitoses or Ki-67 by ≥10-points was observed in 35% of metastatic samples; clonal relationship in one pair with marked proliferative progression was confirmed by next-generation sequencing. Notably, escalation of proliferation rate was documented in a subset of metastases arising from resected typical carcinoids, emphasizing that the diagnosis of typical carcinoid in primary tumor does not assure low proliferation rate at metastatic sites. In conclusion, stage IV lung carcinoids frequently exceed the standard proliferative criteria established for primary tumors, and commonly exhibit proliferative escalation at metastatic sites. Despite the overlap of proliferation rates, these tumors show fundamental morphologic, genomic and clinical differences from neuroendocrine carcinomas, and should be classified separately from those tumors. Awareness of the increased proliferative spectrum in metastatic carcinoids is critical for their accurate diagnosis. Further studies are warranted to explore the impact of proliferation indices on prognosis and therapeutic responses of patients with metastatic carcinoids. 2019-03-28 2019-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6746332/ /pubmed/30923345 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41379-019-0248-2 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Rekhtman, Natasha
Desmeules, Patrice
Litvak, Anna M.
Pietanza, Maria C.
Santos-Zabala, Maria Lauren
Ni, Ai
Montecalvo, Joseph
Chang, Jason C.
Beras, Amanda
Preeshagul, Isabel R.
Sabari, Joshua K.
Rudin, Charles M.
Ladanyi, Marc
Klimstra, David S.
Travis, William D.
Lai, Wei-Chu
Stage IV Lung Carcinoids: Spectrum and Evolution of Proliferation Rate, Focusing on Variants with Elevated Proliferation Indices
title Stage IV Lung Carcinoids: Spectrum and Evolution of Proliferation Rate, Focusing on Variants with Elevated Proliferation Indices
title_full Stage IV Lung Carcinoids: Spectrum and Evolution of Proliferation Rate, Focusing on Variants with Elevated Proliferation Indices
title_fullStr Stage IV Lung Carcinoids: Spectrum and Evolution of Proliferation Rate, Focusing on Variants with Elevated Proliferation Indices
title_full_unstemmed Stage IV Lung Carcinoids: Spectrum and Evolution of Proliferation Rate, Focusing on Variants with Elevated Proliferation Indices
title_short Stage IV Lung Carcinoids: Spectrum and Evolution of Proliferation Rate, Focusing on Variants with Elevated Proliferation Indices
title_sort stage iv lung carcinoids: spectrum and evolution of proliferation rate, focusing on variants with elevated proliferation indices
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6746332/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30923345
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41379-019-0248-2
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