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Morphologic, Molecular and Clinical Features of Aggressive Variant Prostate Cancer

The term aggressive variant prostate cancer (AVPCa) refers to androgen receptor (AR)-independent anaplastic forms of prostate cancer (PCa), clinically characterized by a rapidly progressive disease course. This involves hormone refractoriness and metastasis in visceral sites. Morphologically, AVPCa...

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Autores principales: Montironi, Rodolfo, Cimadamore, Alessia, Lopez-Beltran, Antonio, Scarpelli, Marina, Aurilio, Gaetano, Santoni, Matteo, Massari, Francesco, Cheng, Liang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7291250/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32344931
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells9051073
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author Montironi, Rodolfo
Cimadamore, Alessia
Lopez-Beltran, Antonio
Scarpelli, Marina
Aurilio, Gaetano
Santoni, Matteo
Massari, Francesco
Cheng, Liang
author_facet Montironi, Rodolfo
Cimadamore, Alessia
Lopez-Beltran, Antonio
Scarpelli, Marina
Aurilio, Gaetano
Santoni, Matteo
Massari, Francesco
Cheng, Liang
author_sort Montironi, Rodolfo
collection PubMed
description The term aggressive variant prostate cancer (AVPCa) refers to androgen receptor (AR)-independent anaplastic forms of prostate cancer (PCa), clinically characterized by a rapidly progressive disease course. This involves hormone refractoriness and metastasis in visceral sites. Morphologically, AVPCa is made up of solid sheets of cells devoid of pleomorphism, with round and enlarged nuclei with prominent nucleoli and slightly basophilic cytoplasm. The cells do not show the typical architectural features of prostatic adenocarcinoma and mimic the undifferentiated carcinoma of other organs and locations. The final diagnosis is based on the immunohistochemical expression of markers usually seen in the prostate, such as prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA). A subset of AVPCa can also express neuroendocrine (NE) markers such as chromogranin A, synaptophysin and CD56. This letter subset represents an intermediate part of the spectrum of NE tumors which ranges from small cell to large cell carcinoma. All such tumors can develop following potent androgen receptor pathway inhibition. This means that castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPCa) transdifferentiates and becomes a treatment-related NE PCa in a clonally divergent manner. The tumors that do not show NE differentiation might harbor somatic and/or germline alterations in the DNA repair pathway. The identification of these subtypes has direct clinical relevance with regard to the potential benefit of platinum-based chemotherapy, poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors and likely further therapies.
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spelling pubmed-72912502020-06-17 Morphologic, Molecular and Clinical Features of Aggressive Variant Prostate Cancer Montironi, Rodolfo Cimadamore, Alessia Lopez-Beltran, Antonio Scarpelli, Marina Aurilio, Gaetano Santoni, Matteo Massari, Francesco Cheng, Liang Cells Review The term aggressive variant prostate cancer (AVPCa) refers to androgen receptor (AR)-independent anaplastic forms of prostate cancer (PCa), clinically characterized by a rapidly progressive disease course. This involves hormone refractoriness and metastasis in visceral sites. Morphologically, AVPCa is made up of solid sheets of cells devoid of pleomorphism, with round and enlarged nuclei with prominent nucleoli and slightly basophilic cytoplasm. The cells do not show the typical architectural features of prostatic adenocarcinoma and mimic the undifferentiated carcinoma of other organs and locations. The final diagnosis is based on the immunohistochemical expression of markers usually seen in the prostate, such as prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA). A subset of AVPCa can also express neuroendocrine (NE) markers such as chromogranin A, synaptophysin and CD56. This letter subset represents an intermediate part of the spectrum of NE tumors which ranges from small cell to large cell carcinoma. All such tumors can develop following potent androgen receptor pathway inhibition. This means that castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPCa) transdifferentiates and becomes a treatment-related NE PCa in a clonally divergent manner. The tumors that do not show NE differentiation might harbor somatic and/or germline alterations in the DNA repair pathway. The identification of these subtypes has direct clinical relevance with regard to the potential benefit of platinum-based chemotherapy, poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors and likely further therapies. MDPI 2020-04-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7291250/ /pubmed/32344931 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells9051073 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Montironi, Rodolfo
Cimadamore, Alessia
Lopez-Beltran, Antonio
Scarpelli, Marina
Aurilio, Gaetano
Santoni, Matteo
Massari, Francesco
Cheng, Liang
Morphologic, Molecular and Clinical Features of Aggressive Variant Prostate Cancer
title Morphologic, Molecular and Clinical Features of Aggressive Variant Prostate Cancer
title_full Morphologic, Molecular and Clinical Features of Aggressive Variant Prostate Cancer
title_fullStr Morphologic, Molecular and Clinical Features of Aggressive Variant Prostate Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Morphologic, Molecular and Clinical Features of Aggressive Variant Prostate Cancer
title_short Morphologic, Molecular and Clinical Features of Aggressive Variant Prostate Cancer
title_sort morphologic, molecular and clinical features of aggressive variant prostate cancer
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7291250/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32344931
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells9051073
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