Studies from single institutions have analyzed BRAF in papillary microcarcinomas, sometimes with contradictory results. Most of them have provided limited integration of histological and clinical data. To obtain a comprehensive picture of BRAF V600E-mutated microcarcinomas and to evaluate the role of BRAF testing in risk stratification we performed a retrospective multicenter analysis integrating microscopical, pathological, and clinical information. Three hundred and sixty-five samples from 300 patients treated at six medical institutions covering different geographical regions of Italy were analyzed with central review of all cases. BRAF V600E statistical analysis was conducted on 298 microcarcinomas from 264 patients after exclusion of those that did not meet the required criteria. BRAF V600E was identified in 145/298 tumors (49%) including the following subtypes: 35/37 (95%, P<0.0001) tall cell and 72/114 (64%, P<0.0001) classic; conversely 94/129 follicular variant papillary microcarcinomas (73%, P<0.0001) were BRAF wild type. BRAF V600E-mutated microcarcinomas were characterized by markedly infiltrative contours (P<0.0001) with elongated strings of neoplastic cells departing from the tumor, and by intraglandular tumor spread (P<0.0001), typically within 5 mm of the tumor border. Multivariate analysis correlated BRAF V600E with specific microscopic features (nuclear grooves, optically clear nuclei, tall cells within the tumor, and tumor fibrosis), aggressive growth pattern (infiltrative tumor border, extension into extrathyroidal tissues, and intraglandular tumor spread), higher American Thyroid Association recurrence risk group, and non-incidental tumor discovery. The following showed the strongest link to BRAF V600E: tall cell subtype, many neoplastic cells with nuclear grooves or with optically clear nuclei, infiltrative growth, intraglandular tumor spread, and a tumor discovery that was non-incidental. BRAF V600E-mutated microcarcinomas represent a distinct biological subtype. The mutation is associated with conventional clinico-pathological features considered to be adverse prognostic factors for papillary microcarcinoma, for which it could be regarded as a surrogate marker. BRAF analysis may be useful to identify tumors (BRAF wild type) that have negligible clinical risk.Modern Pathology advance online publication, 14 August 2015; doi:10.1038/modpathol.2015.92.

BRAF V600E and risk stratification of thyroid microcarcinoma: a multicenter pathological and clinical study / Tallini, Giovanni; de Biase, Dario; Durante, Cosimo; Acquaviva, Giorgia; Bisceglia, Michele; Bruno, Rocco; Bacchi Reggiani, Maria Letizia; Casadei, Gian Piero; Costante, Giuseppe; Cremonini, Nadia; Lamartina, Livia; Meringolo, Domenico; Nardi, Francesco; Pession, Annalisa; Rhoden, Kerry J; Ronga, Giuseppe; Torlontano, Massimo; Verrienti, Antonella; Visani, Michela; Filetti, Sebastiano. - In: MODERN PATHOLOGY. - ISSN 0893-3952. - STAMPA. - 28:10(2015), pp. 1343-1359. [10.1038/modpathol.2015.92]

BRAF V600E and risk stratification of thyroid microcarcinoma: a multicenter pathological and clinical study

DURANTE, COSIMO;LAMARTINA, LIVIA;NARDI, Francesco;RONGA, Giuseppe;VERRIENTI, Antonella;FILETTI, SEBASTIANO
2015

Abstract

Studies from single institutions have analyzed BRAF in papillary microcarcinomas, sometimes with contradictory results. Most of them have provided limited integration of histological and clinical data. To obtain a comprehensive picture of BRAF V600E-mutated microcarcinomas and to evaluate the role of BRAF testing in risk stratification we performed a retrospective multicenter analysis integrating microscopical, pathological, and clinical information. Three hundred and sixty-five samples from 300 patients treated at six medical institutions covering different geographical regions of Italy were analyzed with central review of all cases. BRAF V600E statistical analysis was conducted on 298 microcarcinomas from 264 patients after exclusion of those that did not meet the required criteria. BRAF V600E was identified in 145/298 tumors (49%) including the following subtypes: 35/37 (95%, P<0.0001) tall cell and 72/114 (64%, P<0.0001) classic; conversely 94/129 follicular variant papillary microcarcinomas (73%, P<0.0001) were BRAF wild type. BRAF V600E-mutated microcarcinomas were characterized by markedly infiltrative contours (P<0.0001) with elongated strings of neoplastic cells departing from the tumor, and by intraglandular tumor spread (P<0.0001), typically within 5 mm of the tumor border. Multivariate analysis correlated BRAF V600E with specific microscopic features (nuclear grooves, optically clear nuclei, tall cells within the tumor, and tumor fibrosis), aggressive growth pattern (infiltrative tumor border, extension into extrathyroidal tissues, and intraglandular tumor spread), higher American Thyroid Association recurrence risk group, and non-incidental tumor discovery. The following showed the strongest link to BRAF V600E: tall cell subtype, many neoplastic cells with nuclear grooves or with optically clear nuclei, infiltrative growth, intraglandular tumor spread, and a tumor discovery that was non-incidental. BRAF V600E-mutated microcarcinomas represent a distinct biological subtype. The mutation is associated with conventional clinico-pathological features considered to be adverse prognostic factors for papillary microcarcinoma, for which it could be regarded as a surrogate marker. BRAF analysis may be useful to identify tumors (BRAF wild type) that have negligible clinical risk.Modern Pathology advance online publication, 14 August 2015; doi:10.1038/modpathol.2015.92.
2015
Thyroid cancer; papillary thyroid carcinoma; microcarcinoma; BRAF
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
BRAF V600E and risk stratification of thyroid microcarcinoma: a multicenter pathological and clinical study / Tallini, Giovanni; de Biase, Dario; Durante, Cosimo; Acquaviva, Giorgia; Bisceglia, Michele; Bruno, Rocco; Bacchi Reggiani, Maria Letizia; Casadei, Gian Piero; Costante, Giuseppe; Cremonini, Nadia; Lamartina, Livia; Meringolo, Domenico; Nardi, Francesco; Pession, Annalisa; Rhoden, Kerry J; Ronga, Giuseppe; Torlontano, Massimo; Verrienti, Antonella; Visani, Michela; Filetti, Sebastiano. - In: MODERN PATHOLOGY. - ISSN 0893-3952. - STAMPA. - 28:10(2015), pp. 1343-1359. [10.1038/modpathol.2015.92]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/794147
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