Intravenous leiomyomatosis is an unusual smooth muscle neoplasm with
quasi-malignant intravascular growth but a histologically banal appearance.
Herein, we report expression and molecular cytogenetic analyses of a series of
12 intravenous leiomyomatosis cases to understand better the pathogenesis of
intravenous leiomyomatosis. All cases were analyzed for expression of HMGA2,
MDM2 and CDK4 proteins by immunohistochemistry based on our previous finding of
der(14)t(12;14)(q14.3;q24) in intravenous leiomyomatosis. Seven of 12
(58%) intravenous leiomyomatosis cases expressed HMGA2, and none
expressed MDM2 or CDK4. Co-localization of hybridization signals for probes from
the HMGA2 locus (12q14.3) and from 14q24 by interphase
fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) was detected in a
mean of 89.2% of nuclei in HMGA2-positive cases by immunohistochemistry,
but in only 12.4% of nuclei in negative cases, indicating an association
of HMGA2 expression and this chromosomal rearrangement
(p=8.24×10−10). Four HMGA2-positive cases
had greater than two HMGA2 hybridization signals per cell. No
cases showed loss of a hybridization signal by interphase FISH for the
frequently deleted region of 7q22 in uterine leiomyomata. One intravenous
leiomyomatosis case analyzed by array comparative genomic hybridization revealed
complex copy number variations. Finally, expression profiling was performed on
three intravenous leiomyomatosis cases. Interestingly, hierarchical cluster
analysis of the expression profiles revealed segregation of the intravenous
leiomyomatosis cases with leiomyosarcoma rather than with myometrium, uterine
leiomyoma of the usual histological type, or plexiform leiomyoma. These findings
suggest that intravenous leiomyomatosis cases share some molecular cytogenetic
characteristics with uterine leiomyoma, and expression profiles similar to that
of leiomyosarcoma cases, further supporting their intermediate, quasi-malignant
behavior.
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