Tavares Catarina, Melo Miguel, Cameselle-Teijeiro José Manuel, Soares Paula, Sobrinho-Simões Manuel
Instituto de Investigacão e Inovacão em SaúdeUniversidade do Porto, 4200-135 Porto, PortugalCancer BiologyInstitute of Molecular Pathology and Immunology of the University of Porto (IPATIMUP), Rua Dr Roberto Frias, s/n, 4200-465 Porto, PortugalMedical FacultyUniversity of Porto, Al. Prof. Hernâni Monteiro, P-4200 Porto, PortugalEndocrinologyDiabetes and Metabolism Department, Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra, Praceta Mota Pinto, 3000-075 Coimbra, PortugalMedical FacultyUniversity of Coimbra, Azinhaga de Santa Comba, 3000-548 Coimbra, PortugalDepartment of PathologyMedical Faculty, Servicio Gallego de Salud-SERGAS, Clinical University Hospital, University of Santiago de Compostela, 15705 Santiago de Compostela, SpainDepartment of Pathology and OncologyMedical Faculty of Porto University, Porto, PortugalDepartment of PathologyHospital de S. João, Al. Prof. Hernâni Monteiro, P-4200 Porto, Portugal Instituto de Investigacão e Inovacão em SaúdeUniversidade do Porto, 4200-135 Porto, PortugalCancer BiologyInstitute of Molecular Pathology and Immunology of the University of Porto (IPATIMUP), Rua Dr Roberto Frias, s/n, 4200-465 Porto, PortugalMedical FacultyUniversity of Porto, Al. Prof. Hernâni Monteiro, P-4200 Porto, PortugalEndocrinologyDiabetes and Metabolism Department, Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra, Praceta Mota Pinto, 3000-075 Coimbra, PortugalMedical FacultyUniversity of Coimbra, Azinhaga de Santa Comba, 3000-548 Coimbra, PortugalDepartment of PathologyMedical Faculty, Servicio Gallego de Salud-SERGAS, Clinical University Hospital, University of Santiago de Compostela, 15705 Santiago de Compostela, SpainDepartment of Pathology and OncologyMedical Faculty of Porto University, Porto, PortugalDepartment of PathologyHospital de S. João, Al. Prof. Hernâni Monteiro, P-4200 Porto, Portugal Instituto de Investigacão e Inovacão em SaúdeUniversidade do Porto, 4200-135 Porto, PortugalCancer BiologyInstitute of Molecular Pathology and
Instituto de Investigacão e Inovacão em SaúdeUniversidade do Porto, 4200-135 Porto, PortugalCancer BiologyInstitute of Molecular Pathology and Immunology of the University of Porto (IPATIMUP), Rua Dr Roberto Frias, s/n, 4200-465 Porto, PortugalMedical FacultyUniversity of Porto, Al. Prof. Hernâni Monteiro, P-4200 Porto, PortugalEndocrinologyDiabetes and Metabolism Department, Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra, Praceta Mota Pinto, 3000-075 Coimbra, PortugalMedical FacultyUniversity of Coimbra, Azinhaga de Santa Comba, 3000-548 Coimbra, PortugalDepartment of PathologyMedical Faculty, Servicio Gallego de Salud-SERGAS, Clinical University Hospital, University of Santiago de Compostela, 15705 Santiago de Compostela, SpainDepartment of Pathology and OncologyMedical Faculty of Porto University, Porto, PortugalDepartment of PathologyHospital de S. João, Al. Prof. Hernâni Monteiro, P-4200 Porto, Portugal.
Eur J Endocrinol. 2016 Apr;174(4):R117-26. doi: 10.1530/EJE-15-0605. Epub 2015 Oct 28.
Genetic predictors of outcome are reviewed in the context of a disease--cancer--that can be (too) simplistically described as a 'successful, invasive clone of our own tissues'. Context has many faces that determine a thyroid cancer patient's outcome beyond the influence of genetic markers. There is also plenty of evidence on the prognostic meaning of the interplay between genetics and context/microenvironment factors (encapsulation, degree of invasion, staging, etc.). This review addresses only genetic alterations detected by molecular methods in surgically resected specimens, thus ruling out immunohistochemistry and (F)ISH, despite their crucial relevance as topographically oriented methods. For the sake of the discussion, well-differentiated carcinomas were divided into two main morphologic types: papillary carcinoma (classic and most variants) displaying BRAFV600E mutations and RET/papillary thyroid carcinoma rearrangements and the group of follicular patterned carcinomas that encompasses follicular carcinoma and the encapsulated form of follicular variant of papillary carcinoma, displaying RAS mutations and PAX8/PPARγ rearrangement. TERT promoter mutations have been recently described (and associated with distant metastases and reduced survival) in papillary and follicular carcinomas, as well as in poorly differentiated and undifferentiated carcinoma. TP53 mutations, previously thought to be restricted to less differentiated carcinomas, were also detected in papillary and follicular carcinoma and found to carry a guarded prognosis. Besides their putative importance for targeted therapies, the prognostic meaning of such mutations is discussed per se and in the setting of concurrent BRAF mutation.
在一种疾病——癌症——的背景下,对预后的遗传预测因素进行了综述,癌症可以(过于)简单地描述为“我们自身组织的一个成功的侵袭性克隆”。背景有许多方面,它们决定了甲状腺癌患者的预后,其影响超出了遗传标记的范围。也有大量证据表明遗传学与背景/微环境因素(包膜、侵袭程度、分期等)之间相互作用的预后意义。本综述仅涉及通过分子方法在手术切除标本中检测到的基因改变,因此排除了免疫组织化学和(荧光原位杂交)FISH,尽管它们作为定位导向方法具有至关重要的相关性。为便于讨论,高分化癌分为两种主要形态学类型:显示BRAFV600E突变和RET/甲状腺乳头状癌重排的乳头状癌(经典型和大多数变异型),以及包括滤泡癌和乳头状癌滤泡变异型包膜形式的滤泡型癌组,显示RAS突变和PAX8/PPARγ重排。最近在乳头状癌和滤泡癌以及低分化和未分化癌中描述了TERT启动子突变(并与远处转移和生存率降低相关)。TP53突变以前被认为仅限于低分化癌,在乳头状癌和滤泡癌中也被检测到,并发现其预后不佳。除了它们对靶向治疗的假定重要性外,还对这些突变的预后意义本身以及在同时存在BRAF突变的情况下进行了讨论。