Genomic characterization of cervical lymph node metastases in papillary thyroid carcinoma following the Chornobyl accident.
Lindsay M MortonOlivia W LeeDanielle M KaryadiTetiana I BogdanovaChip StewartStephen W HartleyCharles E BreezeSara J SchonfeldElizabeth Khaykin CahoonVladimir DrozdovitchSergii MasiukMykola ChepurnyLiudmyla Yu ZurnadzhyJieqiong DaiMarko KrznaricMeredith YeagerAmy HutchinsonBelynda D HicksCasey L DagnallMia K SteinbergKristine JonesKomal JainBen JordanMitchell J MachielaEric T DawsonVibha VijJulie M Gastier-FosterJay BowenKiyohiko MabuchiMaureen HatchAmy Berrington de GonzalezGad A GetzMykola D TronkoGerry A ThomasStephen J ChanockPublished in: Nature communications (2024)
Childhood radioactive iodine exposure from the Chornobyl accident increased papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) risk. While cervical lymph node metastases (cLNM) are well-recognized in pediatric PTC, the PTC metastatic process and potential radiation association are poorly understood. Here, we analyze cLNM occurrence among 428 PTC with genomic landscape analyses and known drivers ( 131 I-exposed = 349, unexposed = 79; mean age = 27.9 years). We show that cLNM are more frequent in PTC with fusion (55%) versus mutation (30%) drivers, although the proportion varies by specific driver gene (RET-fusion = 71%, BRAF-mutation = 38%, RAS-mutation = 5%). cLNM frequency is not associated with other characteristics, including radiation dose. cLNM molecular profiling (N = 47) demonstrates 100% driver concordance with matched primary PTCs and highly concordant mutational spectra. Transcriptome analysis reveals 17 differentially expressed genes, particularly in the HOXC cluster and BRINP3; the strongest differentially expressed microRNA also is near HOXC10. Our findings underscore the critical role of driver alterations and provide promising candidates for elucidating the biological underpinnings of PTC cLNM.