ARID1B Immunohistochemistry Is an Important Test for the Diagnosis of Dedifferentiated and Undifferentiated Gynecologic Malignancies.
Basile Tessier-CloutierPublished in: Cancers (2023)
Dedifferentiated and undifferentiated endometrial and ovarian carcinomas (DDC/UDC) are aggressive malignancies defined by morphologic and molecular undifferentiation, and associated with core SWI/SNF deficiency. Their main differential diagnoses include high-grade endometrial and ovarian carcinomas that often show overlapping morphologic and molecular profiles. Loss of cell lineage markers expression by immunohistochemistry (IHC) is commonly used to assist diagnosis, but it has poor specificity, while core SWI/SNF deficiency is much more specific. Approximately half of SWI/SNF-deficient DDC/UDC are associated with loss of ARID1B expression, yet, unlike the other core SWI/SNF proteins (SMARCA4 and SMARCB1), this test is rarely available, even in tertiary centers. Mutational testing for ARID1B is increasingly common among targeted DNA sequencing panels, but it is difficult to interpret in the absence of IHC results. Overall, the importance of including ARID1B IHC as part of the routine panel for undifferentiated gynecologic malignancies should be emphasized, especially as SWI/SNF inactivation is becoming a necessary biomarker for diagnostics, clinical management, and clinical trial enrollment.
Keyphrases
- high grade
- endometrial cancer
- poor prognosis
- single cell
- clinical trial
- single molecule
- cell therapy
- replacement therapy
- healthcare
- cell free
- circulating tumor
- long non coding rna
- clinical practice
- stem cells
- randomized controlled trial
- open label
- smoking cessation
- structural basis
- cell fate
- high throughput sequencing