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Browsing by Author "Mehra, Rohit"
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Item Clinical Utility and Concordance of Upper Urinary Tract Cytology and Biopsy in Predicting Clinicopathologic Features of Upper Urinary Tract Urothelial Carcinoma(Elsevier, 2019) Talsma Simon, Caroline; Skala, Stephanie L.; Weizer, Alon Z.; Ambani, Sapan N.; Chinnaiyan, Arul M.; Palapattu, Ganesh; Hafez, Khaled; Magers, Martin J.; Kaffenberger, Samuel D.; Spratt, Daniel E.; Montgomery, Jeffrey S.; Morgan, Todd M.; Udager, Aaron M.; Lew, Madelyn; Mehra, Rohit; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of Medicine5% of urothelial carcinoma occurs in the upper urinary tract (UUT), a challenging location to biopsy. We aim to evaluate concordance between biopsy, cytology, and resection specimens in a large upper tract urothelial carcinoma (UTUC) cohort.117 UTUC resections with UUT biopsy and/or cytology specimens from 2000–2016 were retrieved; pathologic material was re-reviewed, evaluated for concordance, and correlated with clinical information. 14% pre-operative biopsies, including 8 from renal pelvis and 6 from ureter, lacked neoplastic diagnoses. 77% diagnostic biopsies included subepithelial tissue; 11% demonstrated reclassification of grade and 30% demonstrated reclassification of invasion status. 26% of renal pelvis UTUC and 36% ureter UTUC were invasive only on resection. Of 18 UTUC reclassified from noninvasive high-grade papillary urothelial carcinoma (HGPUC) to invasive HGPUC, 39% had prior radical cystectomy (versus 8% invasive UTUC and 11% noninvasive UTUC with concordant biopsies). Most high-grade UTUC (88%) and some low-grade UTUC (58%) resections had abnormal cytology results. Biopsy-resection pairs with concordant invasion status and pairs with discordant invasion status showed similar rates of recurrence (38% versus 38%) and metastasis (25% versus 27%). 14% of UUT biopsies lacked diagnostic neoplastic material. Grade concordance between biopsy and resection was high (89%), but 30% of cases showed invasion only on resection. Subepithelial tissue was less commonly present in ureter biopsies, particularly from mid or proximal ureter. UTUC in patients with prior cystectomy were more likely to show invasion on resection but not biopsy.Item Clues to Recognition of Fumarate Hydratase-Deficient Renal Cell Carcinoma: Findings From Cytologic and Limited Biopsy Samples(Wiley, 2018) Shyu, Irene; Mirsadraei, Leili; Wang, Xiaoyan; Robila, Valentina; Mehra, Rohit; McHugh, Jonathan B.; Chen, Ying-Bei; Udager, Aaron M.; Gill, Anthony J.; Cheng, Liang; Amin, Mahul B.; Lin, Oscar; Smith, Steven Christopher; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of MedicineBackground: Fumarate hydratase (FH)-deficient renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is rare and highly aggressive and is believed to arise mostly in the setting of hereditary leiomyomatosis-RCC syndrome with a germline mutation of FH. Because of the aggressiveness of these tumors and a frequent lack of ascertainable family history, these tumors may first present as metastases and be sampled by cytology. The cytologic findings of FH-deficient RCC have not previously been reported. Methods: Cytologic and limited biopsy samples from patients with FH-deficient RCC were reviewed retrospectively. Results: In total, 24 cytologic and limited biopsy samples from 19 patients (6 women and 13 men; age range, 22-69 years) who had FH-deficient RCC and metastasis at presentation were evaluated. These included 21 cytology samples ranging from malignant effusions (n = 7) to metastases (n = 11), to samples of primary kidney tumors (n = 3). The samples exhibited cells, often in clusters and abortive papillae, with voluminous, finely vacuolated cytoplasm and large, pleomorphic nuclei with prominent, viral inclusion-like nucleoli. A distinctive finding of peripheral cytoplasmic clearing frequently was apparent, and intranuclear cytoplasmic pseudoinclusions were less frequent. Of 7 cell block and biopsy samples, several of which represented sampling from the same patient, all demonstrated tissue fragments that had discernable morphologic patterns associated with FH-deficient RCC, including tubulocystic and intracystic papillary growth. Conclusions: Features characteristic and suggestive of FH-deficient RCC may be identified in cytologic and small biopsy samples. Although the current samples were identified retrospectively in well characterized cases of FH-deficient RCC, the authors argue that, with appropriate clinical correlation, these features are sufficiently distinctive to trigger recognition and confirmatory workup.Item Computational analysis of pathological images enables a better diagnosis of TFE3 Xp11.2 translocation renal cell carcinoma(Nature Research, 2020) Cheng, Jun; Han, Zhi; Mehra, Rohit; Shao, Wei; Cheng, Michael; Feng, Qianjin; Ni, Dong; Huang, Kun; Cheng, Liang; Zhang, Jie; Medicine, School of MedicineTFE3 Xp11.2 translocation renal cell carcinoma (TFE3-RCC) generally progresses more aggressively compared with other RCC subtypes, but it is challenging to diagnose TFE3-RCC by traditional visual inspection of pathological images. In this study, we collect hematoxylin and eosin- stained histopathology whole-slide images of 74 TFE3-RCC cases (the largest cohort to date) and 74 clear cell RCC cases (ccRCC, the most common RCC subtype) with matched gender and tumor grade. An automatic computational pipeline is implemented to extract image features. Comparative study identifies 52 image features with significant differences between TFE3-RCC and ccRCC. Machine learning models are built to distinguish TFE3-RCC from ccRCC. Tests of the classification models on an external validation set reveal high accuracy with areas under ROC curve ranging from 0.842 to 0.894. Our results suggest that automatically derived image features can capture subtle morphological differences between TFE3-RCC and ccRCC and contribute to a potential guideline for TFE3-RCC diagnosis.Item Merlin immunohistochemistry is useful in diagnosis of tumours within the spectrum of biphasic hyalinizing psammomatous renal cell carcinoma(Wiley, 2022-11) Collins, Katrina; Hwang, Michael; Antic, Tatjana; Paintal, Ajit; Argani, Pedram; Matoso, Andres; Gopinath, Arun; Baskovich, Brett; Mehra, Rohit; Williamson, Sean R.; Idrees, Muhammad T.; Barletta, Justine A.; Anderson, William J.; Hirsch, Michelle S.; Hornick , Jason L.; Acosta, Andres M.; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of MedicineAims: Biphasic hyalinizing psammomatous (BHP) renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is a newly described emerging entity within the spectrum of papillary RCC in the WHO 2022 classification. Molecular analyses have discovered that BHP RCC consistently harbour somatic mutations in the neurofibromin 2 (NF2) gene. The NF2 gene product, merlin, is known to primarily function as a tumour suppressor. Merlin protein loss correlates closely with the presence of NF2 mutations in benign and malignant tumours arising in different sites. In the present study we explored the role of merlin immunohistochemistry (IHC) in tumours within the spectrum of BHP RCC to determine the diagnostic utility of this marker. Materials and methods: We performed merlin IHC in 13 BHP RCC, 18 papillary RCC, 10 TFE3-translocation RCC, 15 TFEB-altered RCC (including 13 TFEB-rearranged and 2 TFEB-amplified), and 10 mucinous tubular and spindle cell carcinomas of unknown mutational status. Results: Unequivocal loss of merlin expression in >90% of the tumour cells was observed in 12/13 BHP-RCC (92%), with the remaining tumour demonstrating weak focal cytoplasmic expression in ~10% of the tumour. In contrast, merlin was diffusely or multifocally expressed in all papillary RCC, TFE3-translocation RCC, and TFEB-altered RCC, as well as in 70% of mucinous tubular and spindle carcinomas. Conclusions: In this study, merlin IHC was ~92% sensitive and ~94% specific for BHP RCC. These data suggest that merlin IHC is a reliable surrogate marker for the presence of underlying NF2 gene inactivation, being diagnostically useful to identify BHP RCC.Item New developments in existing WHO entities and evolving molecular concepts: The Genitourinary Pathology Society (GUPS) update on renal neoplasia(Elsevier, 2021) Trpkov, Kiril; Hes, Ondrej; Williamson, Sean R.; Adeniran, Adebowale J.; Agaimy, Abbas; Alaghehbandan, Reza; Amin, Mahul B.; Argani, Pedram; Chen, Ying-Bei; Cheng, Liang; Epstein, Jonathan I.; Cheville, John C.; Comperat, Eva; Werneck da Cunha, Isabela; Gordetsky, Jennifer B.; Gupta, Sounak; He, Huiying; Hirsch, Michelle S.; Humphrey, Peter A.; Kapur, Payal; Kojima, Fumiyoshi; Lopez, Jose I.; Maclean, Fiona; Magi-Galluzzi, Cristina; McKenney, Jesse K.; Mehra, Rohit; Menon, Santosh; Netto, George J.; Przybycin, Christopher G.; Rao, Priya; Rao, Qiu; Reuter, Victor E.; Saleeb, Rola M.; Shah, Rajal B.; Smith, Steven C.; Tickoo, Satish; Tretiakova, Maria S.; True, Lawrence; Verkarre, Virginie; Wobker, Sara E.; Zhou, Ming; Gill, Anthony J.; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of MedicineThe Genitourinary Pathology Society (GUPS) reviewed recent advances in renal neoplasia, particularly post-2016 World Health Organization (WHO) classification, to provide an update on existing entities, including diagnostic criteria, molecular correlates, and updated nomenclature. Key prognostic features for clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC) remain WHO/ISUP grade, AJCC/pTNM stage, coagulative necrosis, and rhabdoid and sarcomatoid differentiation. Accrual of subclonal genetic alterations in clear cell RCC including SETD2, PBRM1, BAP1, loss of chromosome 14q and 9p are associated with variable prognosis, patterns of metastasis, and vulnerability to therapies. Recent National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) guidelines increasingly adopt immunotherapeutic agents in advanced RCC, including RCC with rhabdoid and sarcomatoid changes. Papillary RCC subtyping is no longer recommended, as WHO/ISUP grade and tumor architecture better predict outcome. New papillary RCC variants/patterns include biphasic, solid, Warthin-like, and papillary renal neoplasm with reverse polarity. For tumors with 'borderline' features between oncocytoma and chromophobe RCC, a term "oncocytic renal neoplasm of low malignant potential, not further classified" is proposed. Clear cell papillary RCC may warrant reclassification as a tumor of low malignant potential. Tubulocystic RCC should only be diagnosed when morphologically pure. MiTF family translocation RCCs exhibit varied morphologic patterns and fusion partners. TFEB-amplified RCC occurs in older patients and is associated with more aggressive behavior. Acquired cystic disease (ACD) RCC-like cysts are likely precursors of ACD-RCC. The diagnosis of renal medullary carcinoma requires a negative SMARCB1 (INI-1) expression and sickle cell trait/disease. Mucinous tubular and spindle cell carcinoma (MTSCC) can be distinguished from papillary RCC with overlapping morphology by losses of chromosomes 1, 4, 6, 8, 9, 13, 14, 15, and 22. MTSCC with adverse histologic features shows frequent CDKN2A/2B (9p) deletions. BRAF mutations unify the metanephric family of tumors. The term "fumarate hydratase deficient RCC" ("FH-deficient RCC") is preferred over "hereditary leiomyomatosis and RCC syndrome-associated RCC". A low threshold for FH, 2SC, and SDHB immunohistochemistry is recommended in difficult to classify RCCs, particularly those with eosinophilic morphology, occurring in younger patients. Current evidence does not support existence of a unique tumor subtype occurring after chemotherapy/radiation in early childhood.Item Reappraisal of Morphological Differences between Renal Medullary Carcinoma, Collecting Duct Carcinoma, and Fumarate Hydratase-Deficient Renal Cell Carcinoma(Wolters Kluwer, 2018-03) Ohe, Chisato; Smith, Steven C.; Sirohi, Deepika; Divatia, Mukul; de Peralta-Venturina, Mariza; Paner, Gladell P.; Agaimy, Abbas; Amin, Mitual B.; Argani, Pedram; Chen, Ying-Bei; Cheng, Liang; Colecchia, Maurizio; Compérat, Eva; Werneck da Cunha, Isabela; Epstein, Jonathan I.; Gill, Anthony J.; Hes, Ondřej; Hirsch, Michelle; Jochum, Wolfram; Kunju, Lakshmi P.; Maclean, Fiona; Magi-Galluzzi, Cristina; McKenney, Jesse K.; Mehra, Rohit; Nesi, Gabriella; Osunkoya, Adeboye O.; Picken, Maria M.; Rao, Priya; Reuter, Victor E.; Guilherme de Oliveira Salles, Paulo; Schultz, Luciana; Tickoo, Satish K.; Tomlins, Scott A.; Trpkov, Kiril; Amin, Mahul B.; Medicine, School of MedicineRenal medullary carcinomas (RMCs) and collecting duct carcinomas (CDCs) are rare subsets of lethal high-stage, high-grade distal nephron-related adenocarcinomas with a predilection for the renal medullary region. Recent findings have established an emerging group of fumarate hydratase (FH)-deficient tumors related to hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma (HLRCC-RCCs) syndrome within this morphologic spectrum. Recently developed, reliable ancillary testing has enabled consistent separation between these tumor types. Here, we present the clinicopathologic features and differences in the morphologic patterns between RMC, CDC, and FH-deficient RCC in consequence of these recent developments. This study included a total of 100 cases classified using contemporary criteria and ancillary tests. Thirty-three RMCs (SMARCB1/INI1-deficient, hemoglobinopathy), 38 CDCs (SMARCB1/INI1-retained), and 29 RCCs defined by the FH-deficient phenotype (FH/2SC or FH/2SC with FH mutation, regardless of HLRCC syndromic stigmata/history) were selected. The spectrum of morphologic patterns was critically evaluated, and the differences between the morphologic patterns present in the 3 groups were analyzed statistically. Twenty-five percent of cases initially diagnosed as CDC were reclassified as FH-deficient RCC on the basis of our contemporary diagnostic approach. Among the different overlapping morphologic patterns, sieve-like/cribriform and reticular/yolk sac tumor-like patterns favored RMCs, whereas intracystic papillary and tubulocystic patterns favored FH-deficient RCC. The tubulopapillary pattern favored both CDCs and FH-deficient RCCs, and the multinodular infiltrating papillary pattern favored CDCs. Infiltrating glandular and solid sheets/cords/nested patterns were not statistically different among the 3 groups. Viral inclusion-like macronucleoli, considered as a hallmark of HLRCC-RCCs, were observed significantly more frequently in FH-deficient RCCs. Despite the overlapping morphology found among these clinically aggressive infiltrating high-grade adenocarcinomas of the kidney, reproducible differences in morphology emerged between these categories after rigorous characterization. Finally, we recommend that definitive diagnosis of CDC should only be made if RMC and FH-deficient RCC are excluded.