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Cytogenetic aberrations in 188 benign and borderline adipose tissue tumors
Author(s) -
Mandahl Nils,
Höglund Mattias,
Mertens Fredrik,
Mitelman Felix,
Rydholm Anders,
Willén Helena,
Brosjö Otte
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
genes, chromosomes and cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.754
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 1098-2264
pISSN - 1045-2257
DOI - 10.1002/gcc.2870090309
Subject(s) - adipose tissue , medicine , pathology
Chromosome studies of lipomas have revealed an extensive cytogenetic heterogeneity. To investigate the frequencies of previously recognized cytogenetic subgroups and to find out if more recurrent rearrangements can be identified, we have analyzed cytogenetically short‐term tissue cultures of 237 samples from 188 adipose tissue tumors obtained from 142 patients. Only one of 58 tumors from 18 patients with multiple lipomas (more than two tumors) had karyotypic changes. Among the sporadic lipomas, 20 tumors had supernumerary ring chromosomes of unknown origin, 55 had different aberrations involving chromosome segment 12q13‐15, 11 had changes of 6p or chromosome 13, but no rings or 12q13‐15 changes, and 14 had various other aberrations. Ring chromosomes were found in all cytogenetically abnormal lipomas histologically classified as atypical and in nine tumors classified as typical lipoma or spindle cell lipoma. Recombinations between 12q 13‐15 and a few other bands or segments were seen more than once: 3q27‐28 (15 tumors), 2p22‐24 and 2q35 (four tumors), 1 p32‐34 and 13q 12‐14 (three tumors), and 5q33 (two tumors). Recombinations of 12q 13‐15 with 2q35 and 13q 12‐14 have not been described before. Of eight tumors with chromosome 13 aberrations, five had loss of 13q material. Aberrations of 12q 13‐15, 6p, and/or chromosome 13 were found simultaneously in nine tumors. Two to four samples from the same tumor were investigated in 29 tumors with clonal aberrations. Thirteen of these tumors displayed clonal evolution, also noted in another 17 tumors in which only one sample had been investigated. Thus clonal evolution occurred in 30% of the tumors and was particularly frequent in atypical lipomas. Genes Chrom Cancer 9:207‐215 (1994). © 1994 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.