Immunohistochemistry
The resected tissue specimen was formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE) according to standard procedures. IHC was performed on 4 µm thick sections, using the Ventana Benchmark XT Ultra automated staining system (Ventana Medical Systems, Tucson, Arizona). Primary antibodies listed in Table 2were detected using the OptiView DAB IHC Detection Kit (Ventana Medical Systems) by incubation with OptiView HQ Universal Linker, OptiView HRO Multimer, OptiView Amplifier, and OptiView Amplifier Multimer for 12 min each. Slides were counterstained with hematoxylin and Bluing reagent for 4 min each.
Protein
|
Code Number
|
Clone
|
Dilution
|
Pretreatment
|
AB inc. time
|
Table 2
Immunohistochemical Antibodies
ER
|
Ventana 790–4324
|
SP1
|
RTUa
|
CC1 24 min
|
8 min
|
PR
|
Ventana 790–4296
|
1E2
|
RTU
|
CC1 24 min
|
4 min
|
Her2
|
Ventana 790–2991
|
4B5
|
RTU
|
CC1 32 min
|
16 min
|
CK7
|
Ventana 790–4462
|
SP52
|
RTU
|
CC1 32 min
|
16 min
|
P63
|
Ventana 790–4509
|
4A4
|
RTU
|
CC1 32 min
|
32 min
|
CD117
|
Cellmarque 117R
|
poly
|
1:50
|
CC1 40 min
|
16 min
|
Ki67
|
Dako IR626
|
Mib1
|
RTU
|
CC1 32 min
|
16 min
|
aRTU: ready to use |
Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization
For fluorescence in situ hybridization, a SPEC MYB Dual Color Break Apart Probe (Zytovision, Bremerhaven, Germany; Cat-No. Z-2143-200,) was used for the detection of specific translocations involving the human MYB gene at 6q23.3. The orange fluorochrome direct labeled probe hybridizes distal, the green fluorochrome direct labeled probe hybridizes proximal to the breakpoint region of the MYB gene. For visualization of the probes, a 4um thick FFPE slide was deparaffinized, pretreated, and hybridized overnight.
Dna Extraction And Whole Exome Sequencing
DNA from fresh-frozen tumor and formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded normal tissues was extracted using DNeasy blood and tissue kit (Qiagen, Germantown, MD, USA) according to the manufacturer’s instructions and quantified using the Qubit Fluorometer assay (Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA, USA), according to manufacturer’s guidelines. Twist Human Core Exome Plus kit (Twist Bioscience) panel was utilized for the whole exome capturing.
Paired-end 100-bp reads were generated on the Illumina NovaSeq 6000. Sequencing was conducted by CeGaT (Tübingen, Germany).
Reads obtained were aligned to the reference human genome GRCh38 using Burrows-Wheeler Aligner (BWA, v0.7.12) [15]. Local realignment, duplicate removal, and base quality adjustment were performed using the Genome Analysis Toolkit (GATK, v4.1 and Picard) [1].
Somatic single nucleotide variants (SNVs) and small insertion and deletions were called using MuTect2 (GATK 4.1.4.1) [16]. All SNVs with variant allelic fractions (VAFs) less than 1% or that were supported by fewer than 3 reads were discarded to reduce false positive results. We further excluded variants identified in at least two of a panel of 123 non-tumor samples, including the non-tumor samples included in our study. Variant annotation was performed using SnpEff software v4.1 [17]. FACETS v0.5.14 enabled the identification of allele-specific CNAs [18].
Case Presentation
The 60-year-old patient presented with a small nodule of about 5 mm size in her left breast detected on mammography. There were neither skin nor nipple changes, and there was no sign of an axillary lymphadenopathy. Her personal history included an invasive carcinoma of no special type (NST) with lymph node metastasis 9 years earlier in the contralateral breast, which had been treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by mastectomy and axillary dissection as well as adjuvant radiotherapy. Two years later, she had undergone reconstructive surgery on the right breast. Otherwise, the personal history was unremarkable, with several benign naevi, seborrheic keratosis, and a histiocytoma of the skin.
Core Needle Biopsy Specimen
To rule out a second malignancy, sonographically guided core needle biopsy (CNB) of the nodule was performed. Histologically, a non-encapsulated tumor composed of cell nests arranged in a distinct “jigsaw” pattern was visible on all four cores (Fig. 1A). The lesion seemed to have an irregular border, with cell nests infiltrating the adjacent adipose tissue, mimicking an infiltrative growth. The cell nests consisted of a dual population of cells, including central epithelial cells with increased eosinophilic cytoplasm and peripheral myoepithelial basaloid cells with hyperchromatic oval nuclei arranged in a palisading pattern. Each nest of cells was surrounded by a strongly periodic-acid Schiff (PAS) positive basement membrane. Importantly, no cellular atypia or increased mitoses were identified. Immunohistochemically, the tumor showed expression of estrogen and progesterone receptors in very few (< 1%) cells while being negative (1+) for Her2/neu. The proliferation index (Ki-67) was around 5–10% (Fig. 1C). C-kit (CD117) as well as CK7 were positive in the central epithelial cells (Fig. 1B), while the myoepithelial marker p63 showed diffuse and strong positivity in all tumor cells. (Fig. 1D). To exclude the differential diagnosis of solid-basaloid variant of AdCC, a FISH for detection of the MYB-NFIB fusion gene t(6;9) (q22:p23) was performed and showed no break apart of the MYB gene. However, a distinct mutation of the tumor suppressor gene CYLD (missense mutation c.2273G > A, p.Arg758Gln) was found by WES (Suppl. 1). In addition, there was loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of 16q, with the CYLD locus wild type allele (Suppl. 2). In view of all these results, the diagnosis of cylindroma of the breast was made, and the breast biopsy was classified as B3.
Excisional Biopsy Specimen
The patient subsequently underwent excision of the lesion without sentinel lymph node biopsy. In the excision specimen, the cylindroma showed a total size of 8 mm and the same morphology as in the CNB, with irregular margins and cell nests pushing into the adipose tissue, thereby mimicking an infiltrative growth. The tumor was clearly located within breast tissue, not attached to the skin.
Twenty-four months after surgery, the patient remains free of disease.
[1] http://broadinstitute.github.io/picard/