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Dipartimento di Medicina Sperimentale e Clinica, Cattedra di Endocrinologia, and Facoltà di Farmacia, Cattedra di Farmacologia (D.R.), University of Reggio Calabria, Catanzaro; Istituto di Clinica Medica I (S.T.), Istituto di Medicina Interna e di Malattie Endocrine e del Metabolismo, Cattedra di Endocrinologia (A.B., P.V.), University of Catania, Catania; Servizio di Anatomia Patologica, Ospedale S. Pietro e Gravina (G.G.), Caltagirone; and Cattedra di Endocrinologia, Università Cattolica, Laboratorio di Oncogenesi Molecolare, Istituto Tumori Regina Elena (A.P.), Rome, Italy
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Sebastiano Filetti, M.D., Cattedra di Endocrinologia, Dipartimento di Medicina Sperimentale e Clinica, Via T. Campanella, 88100 Catanzaro, Italy. E-mail: filetti{at}mbox.vol.it
| Abstract |
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An activating mutation of the TSH receptor gene in both the primary tumor and the lymph node metastasis was found, due to a base substitution at codon 633 (normal guanine at position 1896 replaced by cytosine CAC for GAC causing aspartic acid substitution by histidine). Other known oncogenes (gsp, ras, PTC/ret, trk, met, and p53) were not involved.
This is the first description of an activating TSH receptor mutation in a thyroid hyperfunctioning carcinoma in which an aggressive malignant phenotype coexisted with activation of the cAMP cascade and differentiated thyroid functions.
| Introduction |
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TSH receptor (TSHR) genetic alterations, responsible for constitutive activation of the cAMP cascade, have been detected in several thyroid diseases, including thyroid hyperfunctioning adenomas and differentiated thyroid carcinomas (5).
We now report a case of a malignant AFTN that had spread to a cervical lymph node and to both lungs and caused thyrotoxicosis. Both the primary tumor and the lymph node metastasis were carrying an activating mutation of the TSHR, suggesting that this type of mutation may play a role in cancer hyperfunction and possibly in the carcinogenic process.
| Case Report and Methods |
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Scintigraphy with 25 µCi 131I showed the presence of two
areas of increased iodine uptake corresponding to the two nodules felt
at physical examination (Fig. 1
). The left lobe was
suppressed, but it was detectable and of normal size at ultrasound
evaluation. Radioiodine uptake of the neck region was 35% after 6
h and 21% after 24 h. Serum T4 was 12 µg/dL
(normal, 5.712.1), T3 was 2.8 ng/mL (normal, 0.81.8),
and TSH was less than 0.06 mU/L (normal, 0.45.0). On the basis of
these findings, a diagnosis of multiple toxic AFTN was made, and
surgical removal was advised. In February 1993, a right total lobectomy
with removal of the isthmus was carried out. The upper nodule was also
removed. At histology, the diagnosis of an insular thyroid carcinoma
with a lymph node metastasis was made.
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Macroscopic examination revealed a 6-cm nodule with small
necrotic areas at the right thyroid lobe. The second nodule was 3.5 cm.
Microscopically, both nodules were constituted by neoplastic cells
arranged in solid nests or insulae, surrounded by hyalin stroma (Fig. 2
). Trabecular patterns and occasional microfollicles
were also present. No papillary patterns were observed. Nuclei showed
finely granular chromatin and prominent nucleoli. Grooved nuclei and
nuclear inclusions were absent. Mitoses were rare. Focal infiltration
of the nodule capsule and vascular infiltration were present. The lymph
node excised was totally occupied by the neoplastic tissue, with the
exception of a thin subcapsular rim. The diagnosis was insular thyroid
carcinoma.
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After thyroidectomy the patient appeared clinically euthyroid. Serum free T4 (FT4) was 1.0 ng/dL (normal, 0.71.7), FT3 was 4.4 pg/mL (normal, 2.15.3), and TSH was less than 0.06 mU/L. The thyroglobulin (Tg) serum level was 513.0 ng/mL. Anti-Tg, antithyroperoxidase, and thyroid-stimulating antibodies were undetectable. Surprisingly, the radioiodine uptake in the neck was very low (5% after 6 h and 3% after 24 h). Therefore, the residual thyroid tissue could not be evaluated by scintigraphy. Urinary iodine excretion was 200 µg/mL. A total body scan with 5 mCi 131I was then carried out and evidenced the left thyroid nodule and diffuse uptake at both lungs. The diagnosis of autonomously functioning thyroid cancer lung metastases suppressing the residual thyroid tissue function was made, and the patient was advised to undergo completion thyroidectomy followed by radioiodine treatment of the lung metastases. The patient refused further treatment until August 1993, when she agreed to undergo completion thyroidectomy. The left thyroid lobe was surgically removed and was found to be unaffected at histology. After completion thyroidectomy, in the absence of L-T4 therapy, the patient was slightly hyperthyroid. Serum FT3 was 6.9 pg/mL, and serum TSH was still suppressed (<0.06 mU/L). Serum Tg was 1170 ng/mL. Radioiodine treatment (150 mCi) was then given to treat lung metastases. Six months later, a second radioiodine dose (150 mCi) was given. The posttreatment total body scan showed a small area of uptake in the neck and no uptake in the lung. The patient was hypothyroid (FT3, 1.9 pg/mL; FT4, 0.3 ng/dL; TSH, 254.0 mU/L). Serum Tg was 11.2 ng/mL. The patient underwent two more 100-mCi radioiodine treatments at 8-month intervals. At the last control, during suppressive L-T4 therapy, serum Tg (16.5 ng/mL) was still elevated.
Immunohistochemistry
Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections (5 mm thick) from neoplastic nodules were cut for staining with a panel of monoclonal antibodies. Immunoperoxidase staining was performed as previously described; counterstaining was with Meyers hematoxylin. Tg was expressed in approximately 80% of the neoplastic cells, although at a low medium level. The titer of proliferating cells, as evidenced by staining with an anti-proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) antibody, was approximately 1:150.
TSHR gene analysis
Genomic DNA was obtained from primary and metastatic tumor tissues and from the normal contralateral lobe using paraffin-embedded tissue, as previously described (6). PCR-amplified fragments encompassing all exon 10 of the TSHR gene were obtained using 500 ng genomic DNA, 250 nmol/L of each primer, 200 mmol/L deoxy-NTPs, Taq polymerase buffer, and 1 U Taq DNA polymerase (Pelkin-Elmer, Milan, Italy). Forty cycles of denaturation (94 C for 1 min), annealing (58 C for 1 min), and extension (72 C for 1 min) were carried out in a programmable heat block (Pelkin-Elmer, Norwalk, CT). Two couples of primers (Genosys, Cambridge, UK), according to the published sequence of the human TSHR (7), were used to amplify exon 10 of the TSHR gene. The primer oligonucleotides were 24 bases in length: 1) 5'-sense primer, 5'-TTTGACAGCCATTATGACTACACC-3'; 3'-antisense primer, 5'-TTGGAGTTGCTAACAGTGATGAGA-3'; and 2) 5'-sense primer, 5'-GCCTCTGTAGACCTCTACACTCAC-3'; 3'-antisense primer, 5'-GTTTTCAATCAGTTCATAGACATC-3'. To confirm the presence of a mutation, we also used primers closer to the mutated TSHR region and carried out sequence analysis in both sense and antisense directions. DNA sequencing was carried out by the dideoxynucleotide method (8), using the double strand DNA cycle sequencing system kit (Promega, Florence, Italy).
| Results |
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| Discussion |
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The case described here provides evidence that an activating mutation of the TSHR gene may be responsible for autonomous hyperfunction of a thyroid carcinoma. A base substitution at codon 633 of the TSHR gene was present in both the primary tumor and the lymph node metastasis, but not in the normal contralateral tissue. Mutations at this codon were previously reported to constitutively activate the cAMP cascade (12). This mutation was probably also present in the lung metastases, because after surgery, lung metastases produced enough thyroid hormone to cause hyperthyroidism and suppress iodine uptake in the residual lobe.
The constitutive activation of the cAMP cascade, caused by mutations at the level of either the gsp or the TSHR gene, has been detected in AFTN (13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19). It is still unknown whether such mutations are responsible for both the autonomous growth and the hyperfunction of the adenomas (20, 21). Activating mutations of either gsp or TSHR have also been reported in a small proportion of thyroid carcinomas (22, 23). These carcinomas, however, were cold at scintigraphy, possibly because of concomitant activation of other oncogenes (e.g. ras) and the consequent suppression of the differentiated functions (23).
The present case represents the first description of an activating TSHR gene mutation in a hyperfunctioning carcinoma. Such a mutation is believed to provide constitutive thyroid function to an insular carcinoma. The insular phenotype is considered a variant of poorly differentiated carcinomas and has been reported to have a recurrence/metastasis rate of 60% and a 10-yr mortality rate of 13% (24, 25, 26). In the present case, however, the tumor retained the biochemical ad structural machinery necessary for hormone synthesis and secretion. It is likely that other undetected oncogene abnormalities were involved in determining the malignant phenotype of the tumor; however, they did not impair the expression of differentiated functions. We investigated a variety of other oncogenes (gsp, ras, PTC/ret, trk, met, and p53), but none was found to be abnormal.
In conclusion, we found that a mutation of the TSHR gene may explain the activation of differentiated thyroid functions in an aggressive and metastatic insular carcinoma that presented as an AFTN causing symptomatic hyperthyroidism. The activation of the cAMP cascade and of differentiated functions may, therefore, coexist with an aggressive malignant behavior, as previously described in thyroid cancer associated with Graves disease (9, 27). The role of activating mutations of the TSHR gene in thyroid carcinogenesis is still unclear (5) and requires further study.
| Footnotes |
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2 Present address: Divisione di Oncologia Sperimentale, Istituto
Tumori Milano, Milan, Italy. ![]()
Received October 8, 1996.
Revised November 8, 1996.
Accepted November 12, 1996.
| References |
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protein-adenylate
cyclase pathway may not be sufficient to generate toxic adenomas. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 81:18981904.[Abstract]
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