Molecular characterization of sporadic pediatric thyroid carcinoma with the DNA/RNA ThyroSeq v2 next-generation sequencing assay

Jennifer L. Picarsic*, Melissa A. Buryk, John Ozolek, Sarangarajan Ranganathan, Sara E. Monaco, Jeffrey P. Simons, Selma F. Witchel, Nursen Gurtunca, Judith Joyce, Shan Zhong, Marina N. Nikiforova, Yuri E. Nikiforov

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

71 Scopus citations

Abstract

The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that our 60-gene DNA/RNA ThyroSeq v2 next-generation sequence (NGS) assay would identify additional genetic markers, including gene fusions in sporadic pediatric differentiated thyroid carcinomas (DTC) that had no known molecular alterations. Sporadic pediatric DTCs with informative molecular testing (n = 18) were studied. We previously tested 15 cases by our standard 7-gene (BRAF, NRAS, HRAS, KRAS, RET/PTC1, RET/PTC3, PAX8/PPARg) mutation panel. Three cases were not tested previously. The standard 7-gene panel identified molecular alterations in 9 of 15 tumors (60%). Cases analyzed by ThyroSeq v2 NGS included the six previously negative cases by the standard 7-gene panel and three cases not previously tested. The NGS assay revealed new gene fusions in four of six previously negative cases (67%). These gene fusions included ETV6/NTRK3 (n = 3) and TPR/NTRK1 (n = 1). A point mutation (BRAFV600E) was detected in one of three untested cases. While standard testing could identify only molecular alterations in 60% of cases, with the addition of the ThyroSeq v2 NGS, this increased to 87% (n = 13/15). Some cases with chromosomal rearrangements, including ETV6/NTRK3, appear to be associated with an aggressive histopathologic phenotype, but had no documented history of radiation exposure. Additional work is needed to investigate if pediatric DTCs could benefit from a reclassification based on molecular subtypes, which may better reflect their underlying biologic potential. Our data support the use of broad gene panels for the molecular diagnostics of pediatric thyroid nodules to aid future classification, treatment, and clinical management recommendations.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)115-122
Number of pages8
JournalPediatric and Developmental Pathology
Volume19
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Mar 2016
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • ETV6/NTRK3
  • Gene fusions
  • Molecular diagnostics
  • Molecular pathology
  • Pediatric
  • Thyroid neoplasms

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