Oncocytic papillary renal cell carcinoma: a clinicopathological study emphasizing distinct morphology,extended immunohistochemical profile and cytogenetic features |
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Authors: | Qiu-Yuan Xia Qiu Rao Qin Shen Shan-Shan Shi Li Li Biao Liu Jin Zhang Yan-Fen Wang Qun-Li Shi Jian-Dong Wang Heng-Hui Ma Zhen-Feng Lu Bo Yu Ru-Song Zhang Xiao-Jun Zhou |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pathology, Jinling Hospital, Nanjing University School of Medicine, Nanjing, China |
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Abstract: | Papillary renal cell carcinoma (PRCC) is traditionally classified into type 1 and type 2. Recently, an oncocytic variant of PRCC has been described. We report a series of 6 oncocytic renal papillary tumors (OPRCC) which tended to occur in older patients (mean, 56.8 years) with a male preference (male-to-female ratio is 5:1). All 6 patients are alive with no evidence of disease after initial resection, showing an indolent clinical behavior. Histologically, tumors exhibited predominant papillary structure with delicate fibrovascular cores. Papillae were lined by single layers of cells with large, deeply eosinophilic and finely granular cytoplasms and round regular nucleus. The phagocytosis of tumor cells was frequently and evidently seen in our cases that hemosiderin-laden tumor cells and foamy tumor cells were noticed in five and four cases respectively. All tumors were immunoreactive for racemase, vimentin, CD10, and MET and negative for CD117. While E-cadherin, EMA, and cytokeratin 7 exhibited variable immunopositivity. FISH analysis was performed in five of six cases and found heterogeneous results. Trisomy of chromosomes 7 was found in three cases and trisomy of chromosomes 17 in two cases. Loss of chromosome Y was noted in one of four tumors in male patients. MET gene status was also investigated by direct sequencing in all 6 cases and found no distinct mutation in any case. These results suggest that OPRCC shows distinct morphology, indolent clinical behavior, and similar immunohistochemical and cytogenetic features with PRCC, seems to be a variant in the PRCC group. Whether the strong expression of MET indicates a potential therapeutic target is still unknown and requires further investigation in clinical trials. |
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Keywords: | Kidney papillary renal cell carcinoma oncocytic tumors MET |
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