Molecular correlates of invasion pattern in HPV-associated endocervical adenocarcinoma: emergence of two distinct risk-stratified tiers.
Histopathology
; 82(7): 1067-1078, 2023 Jun.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-36849702
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND:
The pattern-based (Silva) classification of invasive human papilloma virus (HPV)-associated endocervical adenocarcinomas (HPVA) is an established and reproducible method to predict outcomes for this otherwise stage-dependent group of tumours. Previous studies utilising targeted sequencing have shown a correlation between mutational profiles and an invasive pattern. However, such correlation has not been explored using comprehensive molecular testing.DESIGN:
Clinicopathologic data including invasive pattern (Silva groups A, B, and C) was collected for a cohort of invasive HPVA, which previously underwent massive parallel sequencing using a panel covering 447 genes. Pathogenic alterations, molecular signatures, tumour mutational burden (TMB), and copy number alterations (CNA) were correlated with pattern of invasion.RESULTS:
Forty five HPVA (11 pattern A, 17 pattern B, and 17 pattern C tumours) were included. Patients with pattern A presented at stage I with no involved lymph nodes or evidence of recurrence (in those with >2 months of follow-up). Patterns B and C patients also mostly presented at stage I with negative lymph nodes, but had a greater frequency of recurrence; 3/17 pattern B and 1/17 pattern C HPVAs harboured lymphovascular space invasion (LVI). An APOBEC mutational signature was detected only in Silva pattern C tumours (5/17), and pathogenic PIK3CA changes were detected only in destructively invasive HPVA (patterns B and C). When cases were grouped as low-risk (pattern A and pattern B without LVI) and high-risk (pattern B with LVI and pattern C), high-risk tumours were enriched in mutations in PIK3CA, ATRX, and ERBB2. There was a statistically significant difference in TMB between low-risk and high-risk pattern tumours (P = 0.006), as well as between Pattern C tumours with and without an APOBEC signature (P = 0.002). CNA burden increased from pattern A to C.CONCLUSION:
Our findings further indicate that key molecular events in HPVA correlate with the morphologic invasive properties of the tumour and their aggressiveness. Pattern B tumours with LVI clustered with pattern C tumours, whereas pattern B tumours without LVI approached pattern A genotypically. Our study provides a biologic foundation for consolidating the Silva system into low-risk (pattern A + B without LVI) and high-risk (pattern B with LVI and pattern C) categories.Key words
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Adenocarcinoma
/
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
/
Papillomavirus Infections
Type of study:
Etiology_studies
/
Prognostic_studies
/
Risk_factors_studies
Limits:
Female
/
Humans
Language:
En
Journal:
Histopathology
Year:
2023
Type:
Article
Affiliation country:
United States