Eugenio Galli1,2, Rosalia Malafronte1, Fulvia Brugnoletti3,4, Marcella Zollino3,4, Stefan Hohaus1,2 and Francesco D’Alò1,2.
1 Sezione di Ematologia, Dipartimento di Scienze Radiologiche ed Ematologiche, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Roma.
2
Dipartimento di Diagnostica per Immagini, Radioterapia Oncologica ed
Ematologia, Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS, Roma.
3 Sezione di Genetica medica, Dipartimento di Scienze della vita e sanità pubblica, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Roma.
4 Dipartimento scienze di laboratorio e infettivologiche Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS, Roma.
Correspondence to: Dr. Eugenio Galli. Istituto di Ematologia.
Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS, Università
Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Largo F. Vito 1 I-0068 Roma, Italia. E-mail:
eug.galli@gmail.com
Published: July 1, 2020
Received: August 20, 2019
Accepted: June 2, 2020
Mediterr J Hematol Infect Dis 2020, 12(1): e2020034 DOI
10.4084/MJHID.2020.034
This is an Open Access article distributed
under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License
(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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To
the Editor,
Alterations
of the PTEN pathway play a role in the pathogenesis of some aggressive
non-Hodgkin B cell lymphomas and other cancers, while germline PTEN
mutations predispose to the cancer-associated Cowden syndrome (CS).
Lymphoproliferative
neoplasms are not part of the diagnostic criteria for CS, and so far,
few cases of lymphomas have been reported in CS patients. We describe
the case of a patient with Cowden syndrome sustained by a novel
germline pathogenic variant of PTEN, affected, as fourth neoplasia, by
Burkitt lymphoma. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case
of Burkitt lymphoma reported in a patient with Cowden Syndrome. Here we
describe the case and provide a summary of possible molecular
implications of this genetic disorder on the pathogenesis of this
peculiar type of lymphoma.
Cowden syndrome is a rare, multisystem
disease characterized by hamartomas, macrocephaly, Lhermitte-Duclos
disease (a dysplastic gangliocytoma of the cerebellum), mucocutaneous
lesions and many types of cancer, mainly involving breast, thyroid, and
uterus. Germline pathogenic variants of the phosphatase and tensin
homolog (PTEN) gene were detected in about 30% to 35% of patients
meeting consensus diagnostic criteria for CS.[1]
PTEN
plays a tumor-suppressing function, mainly relying on a protein
phosphatase activity and subsequent antagonism of the
PI3K/AKT/mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway. Besides, PTEN
has a critical role in the regulation of genomic instability, DNA
repair, stem cell self-renewal, cellular senescence, and cell migration.
The
patient we describe was a 57 years old woman who presented to the
Emergency Department of our Hospital for worsening fatigue, abdominal
pain, and dyspnea. Her past medical history was notable for diagnosis
of dysplastic cerebellar gangliocytoma at the age of 46 treated with
surgery, multifocal bilateral papillary thyroid carcinoma at the age of
47 treated with thyroidectomy, and ductal infiltrating breast cancer at
the age of 51 treated with left quadrantectomy and axillary node
biopsy, followed by chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Further, the patient
was a carrier of multiple mucocutaneous nodules, bilateral renal cysts,
and oral and gastro-duodenal micro-polyposis.
Blood cell counts
revealed mild anemia, thrombocytopenia, 1% of blasts, and atypical
lymphoid elements. LDH level was elevated. CT scan showed supra- and
sub-diaphragmatic lymphadenopathies, splenomegaly, ascites, left
hydronephrosis, peritoneal carcinosis, and bilateral adnexal mass (7 cm
in the largest diameter on the right and 5 cm on the left). Bone marrow
aspirate and biopsy showed massive infiltration of atypical cells with
a medium to large size and cytoplasmic vacuoles. This cell population
had a mature B cell phenotype in flow cytometry (including bright
expression of CD20, positivity for CD10, and clonal restriction for
lambda light chain). Immunohistochemical staining of the bone marrow
biopsy showed infiltration by a population of blasts that were
CD20/PAX-5/BCL-6/CD10 positive and strongly expressed c-MYC, while
BCL-2 and MUM-1 expression were negative. The immunohistochemical
findings were consistent with the diagnosis of Burkitt lymphoma.
Due
to high suspicion of a genetic disorder, the patient underwent genetic
counseling leading to the clinical diagnosis of Cowden Syndrome.
Consequently, molecular analysis of the PTEN gene was performed and a novel variant on exon 5 of PTEN,
c.335T>G p. (Leu112Arg), was found in a heterozygous state. PTEN
gene sequencing was performed by PCR DNA amplification followed by the
analysis of the coding sequence and intronic regions of the PTEN gene.
Once
the diagnosis of Burkitt lymphoma was established, we began
chemoimmunotherapy according to GMALL-B-ALL/NHL2002 scheme (pre-phase
followed by cycle A1) on day 1 from admission. The patient developed
infectious complications as neutropenic fever and herpes zoster in
thoracic dermatomes. At the time of neutrophil recovery, pulmonary
conditions worsened with the need for non-invasive ventilation, but
unfortunately, the patient died by multiorgan failure 31 days from
diagnosis.
Following family counseling, we found that the 34 years
old son of the patient carried the same PTEN variant. He presented with
macrocephaly (head circumference 59.8 cm, + 2.5 SD; height 174 cm, - 1
SD), multinodular goiter, multiple hyperpigmented cutaneous nodules,
and intestinal polyps, with no personal history of malignancies. Cancer
surveillance was planned according to the current guidelines.
The
described PTEN variant on exon 5 of PTEN, c.335T>G p. (Leu112Arg),
is classified as likely pathogenic according to the American College of
Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) criteria: it is considered of
moderate evidence of pathogenicity (PM) since it is located within a
critical functional domain in which no benign variants have been
previously described (PM1), it is absent in online population databases
(PM2), and it affects the same amino acid residue where different
pathogenic changes have been observed before (PM5); furthermore, it
supports evidence of pathogenicity (PP) because the patient's phenotype
is highly specific for the disease (PP4).[2]
Identifying this mutation will have important implications for
personalized genetic health care. Through phenomic-based research, the
spectrum of phenotypes associated with germline PTEN mutations is
continually evolving, and these are collectively termed the PTEN
hamartoma tumor syndromes (PHTS).
Deregulation of PTEN activity
and its functional impact on the PI3K pathway is likely to have
contributed to lymphomagenesis in our patient, as there are several
lines of evidence for a role of PTEN deregulation in Burkitt and other
aggressive lymphomas of germinal center origin. Several mechanisms, as
mutation, deletion, transcriptional silencing, or protein instability,
have been described to produce a loss of PTEN function in a variety of
human cancers, including lymphoproliferative neoplasms.[3]
Although
the genetic hallmark of Burkitt lymphoma is the rearrangement of the
MYC oncogene to the locus of immunoglobulin (Ig) genes, which results
in constitutive MYC overexpression, additional recurrent variants
targeting the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K) pathway are
frequent. Mutations in genes codifying for TCF3 protein and its
negative regulator ID3 have been reported in up to 70% of Burkitt
lymphoma bearing pathogenic variants in one or both the genes. TCF3
upregulates components of the B-cell receptor (BCR) pathway leading to
activation of the PI3K pathway through 'tonic' non-NF-kB dependent BCR
signaling.[4]
It is well established that PTEN
loss is inversely correlated with the constitutive activation of the
PI3K/AKT signaling pathway. Inhibition of PI3K/AKT with either PTEN
re-expression or PI3K inhibition significantly reduced proliferation
rate and downregulated MYC expression, suggesting that PTEN loss leads
to the upregulation of MYC through the constitutive activation of
PI3K/AKT. Signaling through PI3K may also be involved in stabilizing
MYC through the regulation of GSK3β activity. The amino-terminus
transactivation domain of c-MYC contains two conserved, functionally
critical MYC family regions called box 1 and box 2. Box 1 contains
phosphorylation sites involved in the proteolysis ofc-MYC by the
ubiquitin-proteasome pathway:[5,6] one of these sites
is Thr58, and it is a target of glycogen synthase kinase (GSK)3β
phosphorylation. The MYC p-Thr58 modification, mediated by GSK3β and
required for MYC degradation, can be blocked via PI3K-dependent
inhibitory phosphorylation of GSK3β on Ser9. Potentially, constitutive
PI3K activation in BL carrying wild type MYC would help promote its
stability and may contribute to its tumorigenic effects. The
loss-of-function protein encoded by our PTEN variant cannot
dephosphorylate PI3K, which consequently, with GS3K beta
phosphorylation, will not lead MYC towards proteasomal degradation.[7]
Overexpression
of MYC may further contribute to the activation of PI3K through the MYC
dependent induction of microRNAs associated with PI3K activation
through their inhibitory effect on PTEN, in particular the miR17-92
cluster.[8] MicroRNAs might also contribute to the deregulation of PTEN expression in Burkitt lymphoma.
As
the reported PTEN gene variant at exon 5 (c.335T>G) was not
previously described, no available studies are helping us to explain
why it may have been responsible for the Cowden Syndrome phenotype
associated with BL. However, we can hypothesize that the variant found
at exon 5 (c.335T>G) resulting in leucine to arginine change at
codon 112 may have lead to loss-of-function of the PTEN protein,
thus contributing to the hyperactivation of the PI3K-AKT pathway, which
is frequent in BL. Indeed, the signaling network in which the PTEN
transcript is involved is much more complicated. We know that MYC
deregulation in BL contributes to PI3K activation by driving expression
of MIR17HG, the precursor RNA for miR-19, an inhibitor of PTEN
expression. Perhaps the mRNA that derives from c.335T>G PTEN gene is
more sensitive to the inhibition of miR-19, thus contributing to the
PI3K-AKT pathway hyperactivation and to the resulting tumoral growth of
pathological lymphocytes in the dark areas of the germinal center.
In
conclusion, the development of a Burkitt lymphoma in a patient with
Cowden Syndrome and germline PTEN pathogenic variant supports the
potential role of PTEN and PI3K pathway in the pathogenesis of Burkitt
lymphoma.
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