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Dr Sarah J Johnson
Consultant Cyto/histopathologist
Newcastle upon Tyne
MOLECULAR TESTING OF THYROID
NODULES
This talk
Overview of molecular abnormalities in thyroid
lesions
Potential value
Our own work
Overview of molecular abnormalities
(NikiforovYE, Modern Pathology 2011;24:S34-43; BhaijeeF& NikiforovYE.EndocrPathol2011;22:126-133.
NikiforovaMN & NikiforovYE. Thyroid2009;9:13511361.
Recent dramatic increase in understanding of
molecular biology of thyroid cancer
Main four
BRAF and RAS point mutations
RET/PTC and PAX8/PPARγ gene rearrangements
Others
PI3K/AKT signalling pathway - PDC
TP53 and CTNNB1 mutations – PDC, ATC
TRK rearrangement – PTC but rare
Prevalence of mutations
Tumour type
Mutation
Prevalence %
Papillary carcinoma (PTC)
BRAF
40-45
RET/PTC
10-20
RAS
10-20 (usually FVPTC)
RAS
40-50
PAX8/PPARγ
30-35
Familial – germline RET
>95
Sporadic – somatic RET
40-50
Follicular carcinoma (FC)
Medullary carcinoma (MTC)
Nikiforov Arch Pathol Lab Med
2011;135:569-77
Bhaijee & Nikiforov Endocr
Pathol 2011;22:126-33
Nikiforova & Nikiforov Thyroid
2009;19(12)1351-61
Rivera et al, Modern
Pathology 2010;23:1191-21200
Follicular variant of PTC (FVPTC)
encapsulated
infiltrative
BRAF
0
26
RAS
36
10
RET/PTC
0
10
PAX8/PPARγ
3.5
0
Like FA / FC
Like classical PTC
BRAF point mutations
Intracellular effector of MAPK signalling cascade
Most V600E → activate BRAF kinase, stimulate MAPK pathway →
tumourigenic for thyroid cells
1-2% - other mutations eg K601E
BRAF V600E mutation
quite specific for PTC and related tumour types
60% classical PTC
80% tall cell variant PTC
10% FVPTC
10-15% PDC
20-30% ATC
NOT in FC, MTC or benign nodules
early in pathway
BRAF - clinical and prognostic value
Melcket al The Oncologist2010;15:1285-93;Yipet al.Surgery2009;146:1215-23;Xinget al J ClinOncol2009;27:2977-2982.
Associated with aggressive tumour characteristics (V600E only)
ETE, multicentricity, advanced stage, LN+, distant metastases, recurrence,
persistence, re-operations, tall cell morphology, lymphovascular invasion,
suspicious USS features
especially >65 yrs
Independent predictor of treatment failure, tumour recurrence,
tumour-related death
Even in microPTC – associated with poorer clinicopathological
features (eg ETE, LN+) – exciting because management debated
May relate to
tendency to de-differentiate
reduced ability to trap radio-iodine
less responsive to TSH suppression
BRAF – diagnostic value in cytology
Adeniranet al Thyroid2011;21(7):717-23.Bentzet al OtolaryngolHead and Neck Surgery 2009;140:709-14
BRAF mutation strongly correlates with PTC, independent of
cytology
Improves accuracy, specificity and PPV for PTC
Specificity and PPV for PTC with BRAF-positivity = virtually
100%
Mixed results for sensitivity & NPV, can be low
Helpful in identifying PTC in “indeterminate” cytology samples
Could use to change management decision
Indeterminate
cytology
positive
Total thyroidectomy
+/ level VI LNs
negative
Diagnostic
hemithyroidectomy
BRAF test
BRAF –accuracy in cytology
6 false positives for malignancy with BRAF analysis
1 case in Korea – indeterminate cytology, BRAF-positive → histology of
“atypical nodular hyperplasia”
5 when ultrasensitive testing used, not positive on repeat testing
Recent meta-analysis – BRAF testing in 2766 samples
581 BRAF-positive → 580 were PTC (some with benign cytology)
rate of malignancy for BRAF-positivity = 99.8%
frequency of indeterminate cytology in BRAF-positive samples = 15-39%
Various techniques possible but need to avoid ultrasensitive
detection and methods that are not well validated → may risk
false positives
BRAF detection in cytology also predicts aggressiveness
BRAF-negativity with indeterminate cytology does not
eliminate need for diagnostic hemithyroidectomy
BRAF –therapeutic value
Predicts aggressiveness →maybe consider more
aggressive treatment, more frequent follow-up,
but maybe not enough to act on yet
Therapeutic target - BRAF inhibitors eg sorafenib
RAS - point mutations
Family includes HRAS, NRAS, KRAS
Propagate signals along MAPK and other signalling cascades
Most frequent mutations in thyroid
NRAS codon 61
HRAS codon 61
Found in
10-20% PTC – mostly FVPTC
40-50% FC
20-40% FA – but ?precursors for FC
some hyperplastic nodules but clonal so ?neoplasm
less in oncocytic tumours
RAS - point mutations
Prognosis
some association with dedifferentiation and worse outlook
but also associated with eFVPTC – indolent behaviour
Finding RAS mutation in thyroid nodule
strong evidence for neoplasia
but does not establish diagnosis of malignancy
RAS mutation in cytology
PPV for malignancy 74-88%
helpful when cytology difficult such as FVPTC
RET/PTC gene rearrangements
RET highly expressed in C cells, not follicular cells
But activated by RET/PTC rearrangement
11 types, RET fusion to different genes
Commonest in thyroid cancer - RET/PTC1 & RET/PTC3
All fusions activate MAPK signalling pathway
Variation in expression – needs to be “clonal”, ie majority
Clonal RET/PTC - reasonably specific for PTC
10-20% PTC in adults
50-80% PTC after radiation exposure (RET/PTC1 – classical PTC,
RET/PTC3 – solid type PTC)
40-70% PTC in children and young adults
Non-clonal RET/PTC – no diagnostic implications
RET/PTC- prognosis and diagnosis
PTC with RET/PTC - younger age, classical PTC histology,
high rate LN metastases
But varied views on overall prognostic value
Detection of clonal RET/PTC = strong indication PTC
Histology – not useful because classical so diagnosis clear
In FNA – can improve pre-operative diagnosis PTC but
can have false positives
PAX8/PPARγ gene rearrangement
Fusion between PAX8 gene and perioxisome proliferator
activated receptor (PPARγ) gene
Causes over-expression of PPARγ protein
Found in
30-40% conventional FC
less often in oncocytic carcinomas
5-38% FVPTC
2-13% FA – often thick capsule, ?pre-FC or misdiagnosed
Often - younger age, smaller tumour, more frequent vascular
invasion
Detection in histology not diagnostic of malignancy but should
prompt exhaustive search for capsular or vascular invasion
Detection in FNA – typically malignant but numbers low
Gene expression profiles
Borupet al Endocr-RelatedCancer2010;17:691-708.Maenhautet al ClinOncol2011;23:282-288.Ferrazet al ClinEndocrinolMetab2011;96(7):2016-2026
mRNA
no ideal marker of PTC
lack of markers to distinguish FC from FA
slight difference between radiation-induced PTC and not
?can measure different background susceptibilities to
radiation
microRNAs
easier to extract from FNA than mRNA
possible future diagnostic potential
PTC & FC have different profile to normal thyroid
Review of 20 studies of genetic testing
Ferraz et al ClinEndocrinolMetab2011;96(7):2016-2026
Highest sensitivity with panel of markers
BUT more FP with panel than with single marker
Best if done on same material as used for cytology, not extra
Suggest
Indeterminate
cytology
Panel of
markers
Negative
group
Malignancy risk
down from
20% to 8-10%
miRNA
Cohort with
3% malignancy
risk
?follow up
with USS +
repeat FNA
Commercially available kits – USA
Sample in special preservative solution
→ panel of 7 molecular markers
Commercially available kits – USA
Sample → cytopathology →
inadequate, benign or malignant report
indeterminates → gene expression
Our own work in Newcastle
Initial project
Current BRAF pilot
Initial project – BSCC presentation 2011
S. Hardy, U.K. Mallick, P. Perros, S.J. Johnson, A. Curtis and D Bourn
Aim: to set up and validate assays for detection of molecular markers in
thyroid samples
Retrospective – archival histology then cytology
Panel of markers:
• BRAF codon 600
• HRAS codon 61
on extracted DNA
• KRAS codons 12/13
(melt curve analysis)
• NRAS codon 61
• RET/PTC rearrangements
on extracted RNA
• PAX8/PPARγ rearrangements
(RT-PCR-based assays)
Example data – NRAS codon 61
WT CONTROL
CODON 61 (Q61K) CONTROL
WT
Q61K
WT
WT
Q61K
Results – point mutations on thyroid histology cases
32 cases (patients), 36 blocks
6 non-neoplastic nodules
0/6
0%
5 follicular thyroid adenoma (FA)
0/6
0%
5 follicular thyroid carcinoma (FC)
1/5
20% (NRAS codon 61)
7 papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC)
1/6
17%
4 “aggressive” PTC (aPTC)
4/4
100% (BRAF v600E)
3 poorly differentiated carcinoma (PDC)
1/3
33% (NRAS codon 61)
1 SCC
1/1
100% (NRAS codon 61)
1 metastatic struma ovarii
1/1
100% (NRAS codon 61)
• ie. pattern as expected
• Concordance between different blocks from same tumour
(BRAF v600E)
Results – point mutations on cytology slides
Cases with molecular result available on histology:
NNN
2 cases, 4 slides
1/3
50% cases (NRAS codon 61)
FA
1 case, 1 slide
0/1
0%
FC
4 cases, 7 slides
2/6
50% cases (1 NRAS, 1 HRAS)
PTC
2 cases, 6 slides
1/3
17% (NRAS codon 61)
aPTC
3 cases, 9 slides
4 tumour
3/3
100% (2 BRAF V600E, 1 HRAS codon 61)
5 LN/bed
1/3
50% cases (HRAS but in neg LN)
0/2
0%
PDC
1 case, 2 slides
Cases with no molecular result available on histology:
Thy4 (histol = FA)
0/1
0%
Thy3 (histol = FC)
0/1
0%
Thy3f (histol = FC), 4 slides
2/2
100% (NRAS,HRAS)
Results as cancer patients
23 cancer cases
21 molecular results on histology
9/21 mutations
5 of 9 had molecular tests on cytology: 2 fails, 3 positive matches
2 no molecular result on histology
1/2 mutation on cytology
ie. cytology found mutations in 57% (4/7)
Results as mutations
13 cases with mutations (on cytology and/or histology)
12 malignant outcome
1 benign outcome
9 histology cases with mutations – all malignant outcomes
11 cytology slides with 12 mutations - 7 patients - 6 malignant outcomes
mutation
No of mutations
outcome
malignant
benign
BRAF V600E
2
2 aPTC (2 pts)
0
NRAS codon 61
5
3 FC (2 pts)
1 PTC
1 (NNN)
HRAS codon 61
5
2 FC (2 pts)
0
2 aPTC (1 tumour, 1 neg LN)
KRAS codon
0
0
0
Results as cytology slides
37 cytology slides
29 thyroid, 4 LN, 4 recurrences
Most were DQ slides
Failure rate 9 of 37 = 24%
1 LBC slide (SurePath) - paired DQ worked
2 cyst fluid only (LN met) – failed (same case histology worked)
2 unsatisfactory slides (1 thyroid, 1 bed) – a paired US worked
1 with lots blood & colloid – paired slide worked
2 Thy3f
1 Thy5
Results as cytology slides
37 cytology slides
24 slides with histology mutation result available
9 in agreement for no mutation
4 in agreement for presence of mutation
5 discordances – mutations in cytol not histol, 4 malignant outcomes
11 cytology pairs (2 slides from same specimen)
4 matches – 1 fail, 1 NRAS, 2 no mutation
7 mismatches – 3 with one fail, 2 NRAS v fail, 1 NRAS v no mutation, 1
BRAF V600E v HRAS codon 61
1 of 4 slides from same specimen
2 fail, 1 NRAS & HRAS, 1 HRAS only
Conclusions from initial study
• Molecular testing for DNA point mutations is feasible in stained thyroid
cytology samples
• PPV 92% for malignant outcome
• BUT
• not always successful result
• not always match of cytology with cytology, or cytology with histology
• can have multiple mutations in one sample and/or tumour
• can have mutations in negative LN cytology sample from cancer case
• can have mutations in non-neoplastic nodules
• Next step – prospective BRAF testing for 12 months
• Molecular testing also feasible in histology of thyroid cancers – possible
future role for individualised treatment and prognostication
Current BRAF Pilot
Prospective
12 months BRAF testing on cytology reported
as Thy3a, Thy3f, Thy4 and Thy5 PTC
No result to clinician, no action on result
Will then
correlate with surgical and histological outcome
assess whether BRAF result would have influenced
management decision
BRAF Pilot – results so far
Tested 14 cytology slides from 13 patients
Slide types
12 DQ – all worked, even with heavy bloodstaining
1 ICC for Tg on destained DQ – worked
1 SurePath LBC – failed
Outcomes
2 BRAF V600E mutations
LN5 met PTC (histol = classical & follicular variant, pT3 pN1b)
Thyroid Thy5 PTC (histol = classical multifocal, pT1b pN1b)
11 wild type
7 Thy3a - 1 with histol = FA
3 Thyf - 1 with histol = dominant nodule with contralat PTC
1 Thy5 ATC vs MM – histol = ATC
Summary points for whole talk
Molecular testing of thyroid cytology and
histology specimens is feasible in routine labs
Diagnostic aims
single stage theraeutic surgery for cancers
avoiding diagnostic hemithyroidectomies for benigns
BRAF mutation shows most promise
diagnostically, prognostically & therapeutically
Other mutations and rearrangements
diagnostically & prognostically – less predictive
Also likely future role for microRNA studies
Thankyou for listening