Immunohistochemical Profile of MYC Protein in Pediatric Small Round Blue Cell Tumors

Author:

Chisholm Karen M12,Krishnan Chandra3,Heerema-McKenney Amy4,Natkunam Yasodha1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA

2. Now at Seattle Children’s Hospital, Department of Laboratories, Seattle, Washington, USA

3. Dell Children’s Medical Center, Department of Pathology, Austin, Texas, USA

4. Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Institute, Cleveland Clinic Cleveland, Ohio, USA

Abstract

Deregulation of MYC oncoprotein in cancers can result from multiple oncogenic mechanisms. Although MYC translocations define Burkitt lymphoma and MYC protein expression is a poor prognostic factor in undifferentiated neuroblastomas, the distribution of MYC protein (c-MYC) across other pediatric small round blue cell tumors (SRBCT) has not been well characterized. We undertook this study to assess MYC protein expression in a large cohort of pediatric lymphomas, sarcomas, and other SRBCT. Tissue microarrays containing 302 SRBCT were successfully evaluated by immunohistochemistry using anti-MYC clone Y69, with nuclear positivity scored as 0%, 1%–25%, 26%–50%, 51%–75%, or 76%–100%. MYC protein staining of >50% of lesional cells was identified in 60% of Burkitt lymphomas, 50% of B lymphoblastic lymphomas, 33% of T lymphoblastic lymphomas, 31% of rhabdomyosarcomas, 33% of Ewing sarcomas, and 25% of soft tissue sarcomas, not otherwise specified. Only 14% of neuroblastomas showed >50% staining, and of these, if known, MYCN was not amplified. No cases of Wilms tumor, synovial sarcoma, or desmoplastic small round cell tumor had >50% staining. Recurrences and metastases often had the same percentage of MYC staining (15/30). In conclusion, MYC protein exhibited variable expression across and within pediatric SRBCT subtypes. Overall, these findings provide a baseline for MYC expression in pediatric SRBCT and suggest that there may be multiple mechanisms of MYC upregulation in these different neoplasms.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine,Pathology and Forensic Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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