Genomic analysis of spermatocytic tumors demonstrates recurrent molecular alterations in cases with malignant clinical behavior

Author:

Gupta Sounak1,Sholl Lynette M2,Yang Yiying3,Osunkoya Adeboye O4,Gordetsky Jennifer B5,Cornejo Kristine M6,Michalova Kvetoslava7,Maclean Fiona8,Dvindenko Eugénia9,Snuderl Matija3ORCID,Hirsch Michelle S2,Anderson William J2,Rowsey Ross A1,Jimenez Rafael E1,Cheville John C1,Sadow Peter M6,Colecchia Maurizio10,Ricci Costantino1112,Ulbright Thomas M13,Berney Daniel M14,Acosta Andres Martin213ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology Mayo Clinic Rochester MN USA

2. Department of Pathology Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School Boston MA USA

3. Department of Pathology New York University New York NY USA

4. Department of Pathology Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta GA USA

5. Department of Pathology Vanderbilt University Nashville TN USA

6. Department of Pathology Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School Boston MA USA

7. Department of Pathology Charles University Plzen Czech Republic

8. Department of Pathology, Douglass Hanly Moir Pathology Macquarie University Sydney NSW Australia

9. Department of Pathology Instituto Português de Oncologia Lisbon Portugal

10. Department of Pathology Universita Vita Salute San Raffaele Milan Italy

11. Pathology Unit Maggiore Hospital‐AUSL Bologna Bologna Italy

12. Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences (DIMEC) University of Bologna Bologna Italy

13. Department of Pathology Indiana University Indianapolis IN USA

14. Centre for Cancer Biomarkers & Biotherapeutics, Barts Cancer Institute Queen Mary University of London London UK

Abstract

AbstractSpermatocytic tumor (ST) is a rare type of germ cell tumor that occurs exclusively in the postpubertal testis and typically affects elderly men. Most STs are benign, but rare cases exhibit aggressive clinical behavior, often in association with transition to sarcomatoid histology. Limited molecular analyses have been performed on STs; therefore, their genomic and epigenomic features remain incompletely described. Twenty‐seven samples from 25 individual patients were analyzed with a combination of DNA sequencing panels, genomic methylation profiling, SNP array, isochromosome (12p) [i(12p)] FISH, and immunohistochemistry. The series included five metastasizing tumors (three with sarcomatoid transformation, one anaplastic, and one conventional) and 20 non‐metastasizing tumors (14 anaplastic and six conventional). Anaplastic tumors comprised a monomorphic population of intermediate‐sized neoplastic cells, as previously described. Multiomic analyses demonstrated that there were two genomic subgroups of STs: one with diploid genomes and hotspot RAS/RAF variants and the other with global ploidy shift and absence of recurrent mutations. Relative gain of chromosome 9 was a consistent finding in both subgroups. A comparison of metastasizing and non‐metastasizing cases demonstrated that aggressive behavior was associated with the acquisition of pathogenic TP53 mutations and/or relative gains of 12p/i(12p). In cases with sarcomatoid transformation, TP53 mutations seem to underlie the transition to sarcomatoid histology. Genomic methylation analysis demonstrated that aggressive cases with gains of 12p cluster closer to pure seminomas than to STs without gains of 12p. In conclusion, STs include two genomic subgroups, characterized by global ploidy shifts without recurrent mutations and diploid genomes with RAS/RAF hotspot mutations, respectively. Biologic progression was associated with relative gains of 12p and TP53 mutations. The findings in STs with relative gains of 12p suggest that they may exhibit biologic characteristics akin to those seen in germ cell neoplasia in situ‐related germ cell tumors rather than non‐germ cell neoplasia in situ‐derived STs. © 2023 The Authors. The Journal of Pathology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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