Cyclin D1 Overexpression With Cytoplasmic Localization Distinguishes Erdheim-Chester Disease From Reactive Histiocytic Infiltrates.
Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a rare disease characterized by the accumulation of neoplastic histiocytes in various extra-nodal tissues. Tissue biopsies involved by ECD are difficult to distinguish from reactive inflammatory infiltrates given the bland appearance of the neoplastic histiocytes. Confirmation of the ECD diagnosis often relies on molecular studies to confirm BRAF V600E mutation or other activating mutations involving MAPK pathway genes. In this study, we examined the diagnostic utility of cyclin D1 and pERK as immunohistochemical markers of MAPK pathway activation in ECD compared with its histopathologic mimics. The cohort included 41 clinically confirmed ECD patients, most with known genetic alterations in MAPK pathway genes (n=38). In 3 cases no mutation was identified. 37 of 41 (90%) of ECD cases showed cyclin D1 overexpression, with frequent staining in the cytoplasm as well as the nucleus. pERK expression was observed in 32 of 39 (82%) cases. Cyclin D1 staining was negative in histopathologic mimics of ECD, apart from weak patchy staining in fat necrosis and uniform staining in a subset of cases of juvenile/adult xanthogranuloma. While not entirely sensitive or specific, in the proper clinical and radiologic context strong nuclear and cytoplasmic cyclin D1 expression within histiocytic infiltrates helps to support a diagnosis of ECD.
Authors
Oskarsdottir Oskarsdottir, Ravindran Ravindran, Koster Koster, Abeykoon Abeykoon, Bennani Bennani, Shah Shah, Goyal Goyal, Go Go, Rech Rech,
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