Secretory carcinoma

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Breast Tumours (WHO Classification, 5th ed.)

(General Instructions – The focus of these pages is the clinically significant genetic alterations in each disease type. This is based on up-to-date knowledge from multiple resources such as PubMed and the WHO classification books. The CCGA is meant to be a supplemental resource to the WHO classification books; the CCGA captures in a continually updated wiki-stye manner the current genetics/genomics knowledge of each disease, which evolves more rapidly than books can be revised and published. If the same disease is described in multiple WHO classification books, the genetics-related information for that disease will be consolidated into a single main page that has this template (other pages would only contain a link to this main page). Use HUGO-approved gene names and symbols (italicized when appropriate), HGVS-based nomenclature for variants, as well as generic names of drugs and testing platforms or assays if applicable. Please complete tables whenever possible and do not delete them (add N/A if not applicable in the table and delete the examples); to add (or move) a row or column in a table, click nearby within the table and select the > symbol that appears. Please do not delete or alter the section headings. The use of bullet points alongside short blocks of text rather than only large paragraphs is encouraged. Additional instructions below in italicized blue text should not be included in the final page content. Please also see Author_Instructions and FAQs as well as contact your Associate Editor or Technical Support.)

Primary Author(s)*

Hui Chen, MD, PhD, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, USA

Katherine Geiersbach, MD, Mayo Clinic - Rochester, MN, USA

WHO Classification of Disease

Structure Disease
Book Breast Tumours (5th ed.)
Category Epithelial tumours of the breast
Family Rare and salivary gland-type tumours: Introduction
Type Secretory carcinoma
Subtype(s) N/A

WHO Essential and Desirable Genetic Diagnostic Criteria

(Instructions: The table will have the diagnostic criteria from the WHO book autocompleted; remove any non-genetics related criteria. If applicable, add text about other classification systems that define this entity and specify how the genetics-related criteria differ.)

WHO Essential Criteria (Genetics)*
WHO Desirable Criteria (Genetics)*
Other Classification

*Note: These are only the genetic/genomic criteria. Additional diagnostic criteria can be found in the WHO Classification of Tumours.

Related Terminology

(Instructions: The table will have the related terminology from the WHO autocompleted.)

Acceptable
Not Recommended

Gene Rearrangements


Driver Gene Fusion(s) and Common Partner Genes Molecular Pathogenesis Typical Chromosomal Alteration(s) Prevalence -Common >20%, Recurrent 5-20% or Rare <5% (Disease) Diagnostic, Prognostic, and Therapeutic Significance - D, P, T Established Clinical Significance Per Guidelines - Yes or No (Source) Clinical Relevance Details/Other Notes
NTRK3 ETV6::NTRK3[1] Fusion results in constitutive activation of NTRK3 tyrosine kinase t(12;15)(p13;q25) Common D, P, T The ETV6::NTRK3 fusion is diagnostic of secretory carcinoma in the appropriate morphologic and clinical context.[2][3][4] This fusion is responsive to TRK inhibitor therapies such as larotrectinib abd entrectinib.


Individual Region Genomic Gain/Loss/LOH


Chr # Gain, Loss, Amp, LOH Minimal Region Cytoband and/or Genomic Coordinates [Genome Build; Size] Relevant Gene(s) Diagnostic, Prognostic, and Therapeutic Significance - D, P, T Established Clinical Significance Per Guidelines - Yes or No (Source) Clinical Relevance Details/Other Notes


Characteristic Chromosomal or Other Global Mutational Patterns


Chromosomal Pattern Molecular Pathogenesis Prevalence -

Common >20%, Recurrent 5-20% or Rare <5% (Disease)

Diagnostic, Prognostic, and Therapeutic Significance - D, P, T Established Clinical Significance Per Guidelines - Yes or No (Source) Clinical Relevance Details/Other Notes


Gene Mutations (SNV/INDEL)


Gene Genetic Alteration Tumor Suppressor Gene, Oncogene, Other Prevalence -

Common >20%, Recurrent 5-20% or Rare <5% (Disease)

Diagnostic, Prognostic, and Therapeutic Significance - D, P, T   Established Clinical Significance Per Guidelines - Yes or No (Source) Clinical Relevance Details/Other Notes

Note: A more extensive list of mutations can be found in cBioportal, COSMIC, and/or other databases. When applicable, gene-specific pages within the CCGA site directly link to pertinent external content.


Epigenomic Alterations


Genes and Main Pathways Involved


Gene; Genetic Alteration Pathway Pathophysiologic Outcome
NTRK3; Activating fusion with 5' partner ETV6 MAPK/PI3K/AKT signaling Increased cell growth and proliferation


Genetic Diagnostic Testing Methods

FISH, RT-PCR, next generation sequencing

Familial Forms

None

Additional Information


Links

https://www.pathologyoutlines.com/topic/breastmalignantjuvenile.html


Notes

*Primary authors will typically be those that initially create and complete the content of a page.  If a subsequent user modifies the content and feels the effort put forth is of high enough significance to warrant listing in the authorship section, please contact the Associate Editor or other CCGA representative.  When pages have a major update, the new author will be acknowledged at the beginning of the page, and those who contributed previously will be acknowledged below as a prior author.

Prior Author(s):

References

(use the "Cite" icon at the top of the page) (Instructions: Add each reference into the text above by clicking where you want to insert the reference, selecting the “Cite” icon at the top of the wiki page, and using the “Automatic” tab option to search by PMID to select the reference to insert. If a PMID is not available, such as for a book, please use the “Cite” icon, select “Manual” and then “Basic Form”, and include the entire reference. To insert the same reference again later in the page, select the “Cite” icon and “Re-use” to find the reference; DO NOT insert the same reference twice using the “Automatic” tab as it will be treated as two separate references. The reference list in this section will be automatically generated and sorted.)


  1. Tognon, Cristina; et al. (2002-11). "Expression of the ETV6-NTRK3 gene fusion as a primary event in human secretory breast carcinoma". Cancer Cell. 2 (5): 367–376. doi:10.1016/s1535-6108(02)00180-0. ISSN 1535-6108. PMID 12450792. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. Arce, C.; et al. (2005-06-17). "Secretory carcinoma of the breast containing the ETV6-NTRK3 fusion gene in a male: case report and review of the literature". World Journal of Surgical Oncology. 3: 35. doi:10.1186/1477-7819-3-35. ISSN 1477-7819. PMC 1184104. PMID 15963235.
  3. Jacob, John Doromal; et al. (2016-06). "Rare breast cancer: 246 invasive secretory carcinomas from the National Cancer Data Base". Journal of Surgical Oncology. 113 (7): 721–725. doi:10.1002/jso.24241. ISSN 1096-9098. PMID 27040042. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  4. Li, Dali; et al. (2012-04). "Secretory breast carcinoma: a clinicopathological and immunophenotypic study of 15 cases with a review of the literature". Modern Pathology: An Official Journal of the United States and Canadian Academy of Pathology, Inc. 25 (4): 567–575. doi:10.1038/modpathol.2011.190. ISSN 1530-0285. PMID 22157932. Check date values in: |date= (help)

*Citation of this Page: “Secretory carcinoma”. Compendium of Cancer Genome Aberrations (CCGA), Cancer Genomics Consortium (CGC), updated 03/27/2025, https://ccga.io/index.php/BRST5:Secretory carcinoma.