Abstract
Childhood papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) diagnosed after the Chernobyl accident in Belarus displayed a high frequency of gene rearrangements and low frequency of point mutations. Since 2001, only sporadic thyroid cancer occurs in children aged up to 14 years but its molecular characteristics have not been reported. Here, we determine the major oncogenic events in PTC from non-exposed Belarusian children and assess their clinicopathological correlations. Among the 34 tumors, 23 (67.6%) harbored one of the mutually exclusive oncogenes: 5 (14.7%) BRAFV600E, 4 (11.8%) RET/PTC1, 6 (17.6%) RET/PTC3, 2 (5.9%) rare fusion genes, and 6 (17.6%) ETV6ex4/NTRK3. No mutations in codons 12, 13, and 61 of K-, N- and H-RAS, BRAFK601E, or ETV6ex5/NTRK3 or AKAP9/BRAF were detected. Fusion genes were significantly more frequent than BRAFV600E (p = 0.002). Clinicopathologically, RET/PTC3 was associated with solid growth pattern and higher tumor aggressiveness, BRAFV600E and RET/PTC1 with classic papillary morphology and mild clinical phenotype, and ETV6ex4/NTRK3 with follicular-patterned PTC and reduced aggressiveness. The spectrum of driver mutations in sporadic childhood PTC in Belarus largely parallels that in Chernobyl PTC, yet the frequencies of some oncogenes may likely differ from those in the early-onset Chernobyl PTC; clinicopathological features correlate with the oncogene type.
Funder
Belarusian Republican Foundation for Fundamental Research
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Atomic Bomb Disease Institute, Nagasaki University
Reference87 articles.
1. Oncogenic rearrangements of the RET proto-oncogene in papillary thyroid carcinomas from children exposed to the Chernobyl nuclear accident;Fugazzola;Cancer Res.,1995
2. High prevalence of RET rearrangement in thyroid tumors of children from Belarus after the Chernobyl reactor accident;Klugbauer;Oncogene,1995
3. Distinct pattern of ret oncogene rearrangements in morphological variants of radiation-induced and sporadic thyroid papillary carcinomas in children;Nikiforov;Cancer Res.,1997
4. Distinct frequency ofret rearrangements in papillary thyroid carcinomas of children and adults from Belarus
5. High Prevalence of RET/PTC Rearrangements in Ukrainian and Belarussian Post-Chernobyl Thyroid Papillary Carcinomas: A Strong Correlation between RET/PTC3 and the Solid-Follicular Variant
Cited by
8 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献