Renal Oncocytoma
Contributors
Daynna Wolff, PhD FACMG
Yajuan Liu, PhD
Rajyasree Emmadi, MD
Banumathy Gowrishankar, PhD
Jane Houldsworth, PhD
Tumor Type
Renal Cell Carcinoma
Tumor Classification
Renal Oncocytoma
Description
Oncocytoma is a benign renal epithelial neoplasm and accounts for 5% of the tumors derived from tubular epithelium.[1]
IHC Markers
Genomic Gain/Loss/LOH
Chromosome | Gain/Loss/Amp | Region |
---|---|---|
1 | Loss | Chr1 |
14 | Loss | Chr14 |
21 | Loss | Chr21 |
X | Loss | ChrX |
Y | Loss | ChrY (male) |
Rearrangements
CCND1 (11q13.3)
Mutations (SNV/INDEL)
From Cosmic Mutated in >20%
Mutated in 10-20%
Mutated in 5-10%
CREBBP (6%), PTEN (6%), MET (6%)
Mutated in 2-5%
VHL (2%), TP53 (2%), ATM (3%), APC (3%), SRSF2 (3%). MLH1 (3%), GRIN2A (3%), NSD1 (3%), TCF3 (3%), BCAR3 (3%), ARID1A (3%), MAF (3%), TCF12 (3%), RANBP2 (3%), BCOR (3%),MECOM (3%), PCM1 (3%)
mtDNA
Epigenomics (methylation)
Unknown
Main Pathways Involved
Mitochrondrial electron transport chain, autophagy and golgi trafficking.
Diagnosis
Diploid with CCND1 rearrangement (Type I); Loss of 1, 14, 21, X or Y (Type II)
Prognosis
Type II is more aggressive and may progress to malignant eosinophillic chrRCC.
Familial Forms
Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome (BHD): FLCN (17p11.2)
Links
References
- ↑ Diaz JI, Mora LB, Hakam A. The Mainz Classification of Renal Cell Tumors. Cancer Control. 1999 Nov;6(6):571-579