Hereditary Endocrine Tumor Syndromes: The Clinical and Predictive Role of Molecular Histopathology

Abstract: Hereditary tumor syndromes are increasingly recognized in the development of endocrine neoplasms. Depending on the tumor type, 10% to 40% of cases are associated with genetic disorders, including the classic multiple endocrine neoplasia syndromes (MEN1 and MEN2), hyperparathyroidism–jaw tumor syndrome, SDH-related familial paraganglioma-pheochromocytoma syndromes, von Hippel-Lindau syndrome, neurofibromatosis type 1, Carney complex, McCune-Albright syndrome, and familial nonmedullary thyroid cancer syndromes, as well as newer entities (MEN4, DICER1 syndrome, glucagon cell hyperplasia and neoplasia syndrome). Although some features commonly seen in familial disease (early onset, family history, multifocal neoplasia, multiorgan involvement) may alert one to the possibility of an underlying genetic predisposition, endocrine neoplasia syndromes tend to be phenotypically complex and heterogeneous and present variably with de novo mutations, making it difficult to recognize and classify on clinical grounds alone. In an era of precision medicine, pathologists play a central role in the diagnosis of familial cancer syndromes, by leading the way toward screening and molecular histopathology prediction models. In particular, the identification of “pathognomonic” morphologic and immunohistochemical “clues” is crucial to raise the possibility of an inherited genetic disorder and to guide further management, including gene testing, counseling, and targeted therapy. Thi...
Source: Pathology Case Reviews - Category: Pathology Tags: Reviews Source Type: research