abstract
Invasion Patterns of Metastatic Extrauterine High-grade Serous
Carcinoma With BRCA Germline Mutation and Correlation With Clinical
Outcomes
Characteristic histopathologic features have been described in high-grade serous carcinoma associated with BRCA abnormalities (HGSC-BRCA),
which are known to have relatively favorable clinical outcomes. The aim
of this study was to evaluate the clinical significance of invasion
patterns in metastatic HGSC-BRCA cases. Of the 37 cases of advanced-stage HGSC with known BRCA1 or BRCA2 germline mutation retrieved from our institutional files, 23 patients had a germline mutation of BRCA1 and 14 had a BRCA2
mutation. The pattern of invasion at metastatic sites was recorded and
classified as a pushing pattern (either predominantly or exclusively),
an exclusively micropapillary infiltrative pattern, or an infiltrative
pattern composed of papillae, micropapillae, glands, and nests (mixed
infiltrative pattern). Histologic evaluation of metastases was performed
without knowledge of genotype or clinical outcome. Clinical data were
abstracted from medical records. Median age was 56 years (range, 31 to
73 y).
All patients presented at stage IIIC or IV and underwent complete
surgical staging followed by chemotherapy. All 37 HGSC-BRCA cases showed either pushing pattern metastases (30; 81%) or infiltrative micropapillary metastases (7; 19%). No HGSC-BRCA
case exhibited metastases composed solely of mixed infiltrative
patterns. Among the 7 infiltrative micropapillary cases, 6 had a BRCA1 germline mutation versus 1 with a BRCA2
mutation. The median time of follow-up was 26 months (range, 13 to 49
mo). All 7 patients with infiltrative micropapillary metastases either
experienced recurrence or died of disease (5 recurrences and 2 deaths),
which was significantly worse than what was seen in patients with
predominantly pushing pattern metastases, of whom 16 of 30 (53%)
experienced recurrence (n=14) or died of disease (n=2) (P=0.03). In conclusion, the recognition of different invasion patterns of metastatic extrauterine HGSC-BRCA
has prognostic implications. The infiltrative micropapillary pattern is
associated with poor outcomes and is more frequently seen in BRCA1-associated HGSC than in BRCA2 cases.
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