• The Journal of pathology · May 2002

    Frequent genomic imbalances in chromosomes 17, 19, and 22q in peripheral nerve sheath tumours detected by comparative genomic hybridization analysis.

    • Takamasa Koga, Hiroshi Iwasaki, Masako Ishiguro, Akio Matsuzaki, and Masahiro Kikuchi.
    • First Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, Fukuoka University, Japan.
    • J. Pathol. 2002 May 1; 197 (1): 98-107.

    AbstractComparative genomic hybridization (CGH) was used to detect changes in relative chromosome copy number in 50 cases of peripheral nerve sheath tumour (PNSTs), including nine malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumours (MPNSTs), 27 neurofibromas (with three plexiform neurofibromas) and 14 schwannomas. Chromosome imbalances were frequently detected in benign as well as malignant PNSTs. In both NF1-associated and sporadic MPNSTs, the number of gains was higher than the number of losses, suggesting proto-oncogene activation during MPNST progression. NF1-asociated MPNSTs exhibited gains of chromosomes 17q and X (2/4 cases each), whereas sporadic MPNSTs showed gains of chromosome 4q (3/5 cases). On the other hand, in benign neurofibromas and schwannomas, the number of losses was higher than the number of gains, suggesting a predominant role of tumour suppressor genes in tumourigenesis. Both sporadic and NF1-associated neurofibromas exhibited losses at chromosome 22q in more than 50% of cases. These chromosomal regions may contain common chromosomal abnormalities characteristic of both types of neurofibromas. In NF1-associated neurofibromas, most frequent losses were found in chromosomes 17 [17p11.2-p13 in nine cases (60%); 17q24-25 in 6 cases (40%)] and 19 [19p13.2 in eight cases (53%); 19q13.2-qter in eight cases (53%)], whereas in sporadic neurofibromas and schwannomas losses of chromosomes 17 and 19 were detected in less than 50% of cases. Since this 17p11.2-p13 region is known to contain the tumour suppressor gene TP53, patients with NF1 may be at high risk of malignant neoplasms including MPNSTs. Gains were more frequently detected in plexiform neurofibromas (2/3 cases) than other benign tumours, suggesting proto-oncogene activation in tumourigenesis of plexiform neurofibroma. The significance of the losses of chromosome 19 in these cases is not clear at present, but in NF1-associated neurofibromas, the presence of some as yet unknown tumour suppressor genes on chromosome 19 cannot be ruled out.

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