Litcius/Paper detail

Mediastinal Germ Cell Tumor and Acute Megakaryoblastic Leukemia With Co-occurring KRAS Mutation and Complex Cytogenetics

Nasir K. Amra, Luis Velasquez Zarate, Jyotinder N. Punia, Priya Mahajan, Alexandra M. Stevens, Angshumoy Roy, Choladda V. Curry, Nahir Cortes‐Santiago, Kevin E. Fisher

2020Pediatric and Developmental Pathology10 citationsDOI

Abstract

Young males have a unique but rare predilection to develop mediastinal nonseminomatous germ cell tumors (NSGCTs) and concomitant acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (AMKL). Common cytogenetic and molecular abnormalities such as isochromosome 12p and somatic Tumor Protein P53(TP53) and Phosphatase And Tensin Homolog (PTEN) mutations have been reported in the presumed mutual neoplastic clones of origin. We report the case of a 17-year-old male who presented with a mediastinal NSGCT with high-grade sarcomatous transformation and a diagnosis of AMKL approximately 4 months later. Next-generation sequencing revealed identical KRAS Proto-Oncogene, GTPase (KRAS) p.Ala146Thr, TP53 p.Leu257Pro, and PTEN p.Leu181Pro missense mutations at similar variant allele frequencies in both the NSGCT and AMKL samples. Cytogenetic and microarray analyses detected shared copy gains in all chromosomes except chromosomes 9, 13, and Y. Multiple additional clonal chromosomal alterations were detected in the AMKL sample when compared with the NSGCT. This case emphasizes the shared clonal origins of these malignancies and identifies KRAS and other copy number alterations as potential molecular drivers in a subset of these combined diseases.

Topics & Concepts

Acute megakaryoblastic leukemiaIsochromosomeKRASPTENBiologyCancer researchCytogeneticsSomatic cellMissense mutationGerm cell tumorsTensinPathologyGeneticsKaryotypeMutationChromosomeMedicineGeneChemotherapyMyeloid leukemiaPI3K/AKT/mTOR pathwayApoptosisTesticular diseases and treatmentsSarcoma Diagnosis and TreatmentNeuroblastoma Research and Treatments
Mediastinal Germ Cell Tumor and Acute Megakaryoblastic Leukemia With Co-occurring KRAS Mutation and Complex Cytogenetics | Litcius