4.7 Article

DICER1 Mutations Are Frequent in Adolescent-Onset Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 103, Issue 5, Pages 2009-2015

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/jc.2017-02698

Keywords

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Funding

  1. SickKids Foundation
  2. C17 Research Network - Childhood Cancer Canada Foundation
  3. Kids With Cancer Society
  4. Canadian Institute of Health Research Foundation [FDN-148390]
  5. Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship
  6. DKG World Fellowship

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Context: Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) is a common malignancy in adolescence and is molecularly and clinically distinct from adult PTC. Mutations in the DICER1 gene are associated with thyroid abnormalities, including multinodular goiter and differentiated thyroid carcinoma. Objective: In this study, we sought to characterize the prevalence of DICER1 variants in pediatric PTC, specifically in tumors without conventional PTC oncogenic alterations. Patients: Patients (N = 40) who underwent partial or total thyroidectomy and who were <18 years of age at the time of surgery were selected. Design: The 40 consecutive thyroidectomy specimens (30 malignant, 10 benign) underwent genotyping for 17 PTC-associated variants, as well as full sequencing of the exons and exon-intron boundaries of DICER1. Results: Conventional alterations were found in 12 of 30 (40%) PTCs (five BRAF(v600E) three RET/PTC1, four RET/PTC3). Pathogenic DICER1 variants were identified in 3 of 30 (10%) PTCs and in 2 of 10 (20%) benign nodules, all of which lacked conventional alterations and did not recur during followup. DICER1 alterations thus constituted 3 of 18 (16.7%) PTCs without conventional alterations. The three DICER1-mutated carcinomas each had two somatic DICER1 alterations, whereas two follicular-nodular lesions arose in those with germline DICER1 mutations and harbored characteristic second somatic RNase IIIb hotspot mutations. Conclusions: DICER1 is a driver of pediatric thyroid nodules, and DICER1-mutated PTC may represent a distinct class of low-risk malignancies. Given the prevalence of variants in children, we advocate for inclusion of DICER1 sequencing and gene dosage determination in molecular analysis of pediatric thyroid specimens.

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