4.6 Article

Combined Large Cell Neuroendocrine Carcinomas of the Lung: Integrative Molecular Analysis Identifies Subtypes with Potential Therapeutic Implications

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 14, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers14194653

Keywords

neuroendocrine carcinoma; combined large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma; next-generation sequencing; transcriptomics

Categories

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health [ERP-2017-23671129]
  2. Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro [26343]
  3. Universita Cattolica del Sacro Cuore (UCSC) [D1-2020]
  4. AIRC IG [20583]
  5. FIRC-AIRC fellowship for Italy
  6. 5 X 1000 Funds-2014 MIUR-grant Integrative molecular analysis of pure and combined lung large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC)

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This study provides an integrated molecular analysis of 44 combined large cell neuroendocrine carcinomas (CoLCNECs), revealing that CoLCNECs are an independent histologic category with specific genomic and transcriptomic features that are different from other lung cancers. The findings of this study contribute to a better understanding of these rare tumors and may lead to the development of new diagnostic approaches for personalized treatments in CoLCNECs.
Simple Summary In this manuscript, we offer an integrated molecular analysis of 44 combined large cell neuroendocrine carcinomas (CoLCNECs) in order to deepen the knowledge about these rare histotypes and to clarify their relationship with lung cancers. In the present state of research, molecular studies are still scant, consisting of small and heterogeneous cohorts, and the genomic landscape is poorly characterized. This study shows that CoLCNECs constitute a standalone group of neuroendocrine neoplasm, with three different molecular profiles, two of which overlap with pure LCNEC or adenocarcinoma. CoLCNECs can be considered an independent histologic category with specific genomic and transcriptomic features, different and therefore not comparable to other lung cancers. Indeed, in addition to a histological re-evaluation of lung cancer classification, our study may help to develop a new diagnostic approach for novel and personalized treatments in CoLCNECs. Background: Combined large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (CoLCNEC) is given by the association of LCNEC with adeno or squamous or any non-neuroendocrine carcinoma. Molecular bases of CoLCNEC pathogenesis are scant and no standardized therapies are defined. Methods: 44 CoLCNECs: 26 with adenocarcinoma (CoADC), 7 with squamous cell carcinoma (CoSQC), 3 with small cell carcinoma (CoSCLC), 4 with atypical carcinoid (CoAC) and 4 napsin-A positive LCNEC (NapA+), were assessed for alterations in 409 genes and transcriptomic profiling of 20,815 genes. Results: Genes altered included TP53 (n = 30), RB1 (n = 14) and KRAS (n = 13). Targetable alterations included six KRAS G12C mutations and ALK-EML4 fusion gene. Comparison of CoLCNEC transcriptomes with 86 lung cancers of pure histology (8 AC, 19 ADC, 19 LCNEC, 11 SCLC and 29 SQC) identified CoLCNEC as a separate entity of neuroendocrine tumours with three different molecular profiles, two of which showed a non-neuroendocrine lineage. Hypomethylation, activation of MAPK signalling and association to immunotherapy signature specifically characterized each of three CoLCNEC molecular clusters. Prognostic stratification was also provided. Conclusions: CoLCNECs are an independent histologic category. Our findings support the extension of routine evaluation of KRAS mutations, fusion genes and immune-related markers to offer new perspectives in the therapeutic management of CoLCNEC.

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