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Separate molecular profiling of mixed endometrial carcinoma components yields limited prognostic data in a small retrospective cohort.

Separate molecular profiling of mixed endometrial carcinoma components yields limited prognostic dat…
Photo by Logan Voss / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Note that separate molecular profiling of MEEC components shows limited prognostic utility in this small retrospective cohort.

This hypothesis-generating retrospective analysis evaluated 8 patients with mixed endometrial carcinomas (MEEC) containing both endometrioid and serous or clear cell components. The study compared separate molecular profiling of histological components against profiling of undissociated tumors, using current guidelines that assess MEEC as a single entity as the comparator. No clinical follow-up data were available for the specific cases.

Regarding mutation detection consistency, the same mutations were detected in undissociated tumors and separate components in 6 cases involving endometrioid and clear cell carcinoma. In 2 cases of endometrioid endometrial carcinoma with serous carcinoma, both components exhibited pathogenic POLE mutations, normal p53 expression, and pMMR status, suggesting a potentially low-risk profile.

A discrepancy was identified in Case 8, where the serous component was p53-abn and POLE-mutated, while the endometrioid component, comprising 55% of the tumor and classified as high-grade, was POLE wild-type. Safety, tolerability, adverse events, and discontinuations were not reported.

Key limitations include the retrospective nature of the study, the very restricted number of tumors analyzed, and the fact that findings pertain solely to a single sample. Observations ought to be interpreted judiciously, as the association between molecular profiles and risk categories does not establish causality due to the small sample size and lack of follow-up.

Study Details

Study typeCohort
EvidenceLevel 3
PublishedApr 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
ObjectiveAdvances in molecular profiling have significantly altered the approach to endometrial cancer (EC). In clinical practice, the assessment of mismatch repair (MMR) proteins and p53 status, combined with the detection of pathogenic POLE mutations, currently categorizes EC into four molecular subgroups with prognostic implications, particularly in early-stage disease: POLE-mutated, MMR-deficient (MMRd), p53-abnormal (abn), and no specific molecular profile (NSMP). However, the current approach is to assess mixed endometrial carcinomas (MEEC) as a single entity without specific molecular evaluation of individual histological components. The present study was designed as a hypothesis-generating analysis to explore this heterogeneity.MethodsThe present analysis was conceived to evaluate whether profiling histological components of MEEC separately could provide additional prognostic information. MEEC with an endometrioid and a serous or clear cell component underwent immunohistochemical analysis of p53 and MMR proteins and POLE sequencing on the undissociated part and then on separate components.ResultsEight MEEC were included. Six cases of endometrioid endometrial carcinoma (EEC) and clear cell carcinoma (CCC) showed that the same mutations were detected in the undissociated tumor and in separate components. Two cases consisted of EEC with serous carcinoma (SC). Both had pathogenic POLE mutations, normal p53 expression, and pMMR status and, therefore, were potentially at low risk. Further analysis revealed differences in the histological components. In particular, in one case (case 8), the serous component was p53-abn and POLE-mutated, whereas the endometrioid component (55% of the tumor and high-grade) was POLE wild-type, representing a potential intermediate-high risk profile. It must be noted that no clinical follow-up data are available for this specific case to confirm whether this finding would have definitively altered the clinical outcome.ConclusionDespite the retrospective nature and limited number of cases, a discrepancy was identified in a case of MEEC with a serous component when compared to molecular analysis of the tumor as a single entity, as per current guidelines. While our findings necessitate evaluation of the current molecular profiling method, the number of tumors analyzed was very restricted, and our observations pertain solely to a single sample. Therefore, these findings ought to be interpreted judiciously and are merely for the purpose of generating hypotheses.
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