4.8 Article

Diverse Oncogenic Fusions and Distinct Gene Expression Patterns Define the Genomic Landscape of Pediatric Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma

Journal

CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 81, Issue 22, Pages 5625-5637

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-21-0761

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Funding

  1. C17 Research Network
  2. SickKids Foundation
  3. Restracomp Graduate Scholarship
  4. Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation
  5. Canada Research Chair in Childhood Cancer Genomics
  6. St. Baldrick's Foundation
  7. National Cancer Institute
  8. Children's Oncology Group [ARAR15B1]

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Pediatric papillary thyroid carcinoma (PPTC) is genetically distinct from adult-onset disease, with 98% of PPTCs having genomic drivers, mainly oncogenic fusion transcripts. In advanced disease, driver variants can guide targeted systemic therapy. This study emphasizes important differences in the genomes and transcriptomes of pediatric and adult PTC, with implications for understanding and treating advanced disease in children.
Pediatric papillary thyroid carcinoma (PPTC) is clinically distinct from adult-onset disease. Although there are higher rates of metastasis and recurrence in PPTC, prognosis remains highly favorable. Molecular characterization of PPTC has been lacking. Historically, only 40% to 50% of childhood papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) were known to be driven by genomic variants common to adult PTC; oncogenic drivers in the remainder were unknown. This contrasts with approximately 90% of adult PTC driven by a discrete number of variants. In this study, 52 PPTCs underwent candidate gene testing, followed in a subset by wholeexome and transcriptome sequencing. Within these samples, candidate gene testing identified variants in 31 (60%) tumors, while exome and transcriptome sequencing identified oncogenic variants in 19 of 21 (90%) remaining tumors. The latter were enriched for oncogenic fusions, with 11 nonrecurrent fusion transcripts, including two previously undescribed fusions, STRN-RET and TG-PBF. Most fusions were associated with 3' receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) moieties: RET, MET, ALK, and NTRK3. For advanced (distally metastatic) tumors, a driver variant was described in 91%. Gene expression analysis defined three clusters that demonstrated distinct expression of genes involved in thyroid differentiation and MAPK signaling. Among RET-CCDC6-driven tumors, gene expression in pediatric tumors was distinguishable from that in adults. Collectively, these results show that the genomic landscape of pediatric PTC is different from adult PTC. Moreover, they identify genomic drivers in 98% of PPTCs, predominantly oncogenic fusion transcripts involving R'I'Ks, with a pronounced impact on gene expression. Notably, most advanced tumors were driven by a variant for which targeted systemic therapy exists. Significance This study highlights important distinctions between the genomes and transcriptomes of pediatric and adult papillary thyroid carcinoma, with implications for understanding the biology, diagnosis, and treatment of advanced disease in children.

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