John Turchini
University of Sydney
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Publication
Featured researches published by John Turchini.
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2016
Thomas G. Papathomas; Eugenio Pucci; Thomas J. Giordano; Hao Lu; Eleonora Duregon; Marco Volante; Mauro Papotti; Ricardo V. Lloyd; Arthur S. Tischler; Francien H. van Nederveen; Vania Nose; Lori A. Erickson; Ozgur Mete; Sylvia L. Asa; John Turchini; Anthony J. Gill; Xavier Matias-Guiu; Kassiani Skordilis; Timothy J. Stephenson; Frédérique Tissier; Richard A. Feelders; Marcel Smid; Alex Nigg; Esther Korpershoek; Peter J. van der Spek; Winand N. M. Dinjens; Andrew Stubbs; Ronald R. de Krijger
Despite the established role of Ki67 labeling index in prognostic stratification of adrenocortical carcinomas and its recent integration into treatment flow charts, the reproducibility of the assessment method has not been determined. The aim of this study was to investigate interobserver variability among endocrine pathologists using a web-based virtual microscopy approach. Ki67-stained slides of 76 adrenocortical carcinomas were analyzed independently by 14 observers, each according to their method of preference including eyeballing, formal manual counting, and digital image analysis. The interobserver variation was statistically significant (P<0.001) in the absence of any correlation between the various methods. Subsequently, 61 static images were distributed among 15 observers who were instructed to follow a category-based scoring approach. Low levels of interobserver (F=6.99; Fcrit=1.70; P<0.001) as well as intraobserver concordance (n=11; Cohen &kgr; ranging from −0.057 to 0.361) were detected. To improve harmonization of Ki67 analysis, we tested the utility of an open-source Galaxy virtual machine application, namely Automated Selection of Hotspots, in 61 virtual slides. The software-provided Ki67 values were validated by digital image analysis in identical images, displaying a strong correlation of 0.96 (P<0.0001) and dividing the cases into 3 classes (cutoffs of 0%-15%-30% and/or 0%-10%-20%) with significantly different overall survivals (P<0.05). We conclude that current practices in Ki67 scoring assessment vary greatly, and interobserver variation sets particular limitations to its clinical utility, especially around clinically relevant cutoff values. Novel digital microscopy–enabled methods could provide critical aid in reducing variation, increasing reproducibility, and improving reliability in the clinical setting.
Histopathology | 2018
John Turchini; Veronica K.Y. Cheung; Arthur S. Tischler; Ronald R. de Krijger; Anthony J. Gill
Phaeochromocytoma and paraganglioma (PHEO/PGL) are rare tumours with an estimated annual incidence of 3 per million. Advances in molecular understanding have led to the recognition that at least 30–40% arise in the setting of hereditary disease. Germline mutations in the succinate dehydrogenase genes SDHA, SDHB, SDHC, SDHD and SDHAF2 are the most prevalent of the more than 19 hereditary genetic abnormalities which have been reported. It is therefore recommended that, depending on local resources and availability, at least some degree of genetic testing should be offered to all PHEO/PGL patients, including those with clinically sporadic disease. It is now accepted that that all PHEO/PGL have some metastatic potential; therefore, concepts of benign and malignant PHEO/PGL have no meaning and have been replaced by a risk stratification approach. Although there is broad acceptance that certain features, including high proliferative activity, invasive growth, increased cellularity, large tumour nests and comedonecrosis, are associated with an increased risk of metastasis, it remains difficult to predict the clinical behaviour of individual tumours and no single risk stratification scheme is endorsed or in widespread use. In this review, we provide an update on advances in the pathology and genetics of PHEO/PGL with an emphasis on the changes introduced in the WHO 2017 classification of endocrine neoplasia relevant to practising surgical pathologists.
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2017
Jessica Reagh; Martyn Bullock; Juliana Andrici; John Turchini; Loretta Sioson; Adele Clarkson; Nicole Watson; Amy Sheen; Grace Lim; Leigh Delbridge; Stan B. Sidhu; Mark S. Sywak; Ahmad Aniss; Phillip Shepherd; Daniel Ng; Paul Oei; Michael Field; Diana L. Learoyd; Bruce G. Robinson; Roderick J. Clifton-Bligh; Anthony J. Gill
A quarter of patients with medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) have germline mutations in the RET proto-oncogene indicating MEN2. Therefore genetic testing is recommended for all patients presenting with MTC. Approximately 40% of MTCs have somatic RET mutations. Somatic mutations in the RAS genes are the next most common driver mutations and appear to be mutually exclusive with germline RET mutation. The single most common somatic RAS mutation is HRASQ61R (c.182A>G), reported in 4.6% to 11% of all MTCs. Mutation-specific immunohistochemistry (IHC) initially developed to identify the NRASQ61R mutation in melanoma (clone SP174) has proven highly sensitive and specific. Because the amino acid sequences for the HRAS and NRAS proteins at codon 61 are identical, we postulated that SP174 IHC would also identify the somatic HRASQ61R mutation. IHC with SP174 was performed on a tissue microarray of 68 patients with MTC including 13 (22.8%) with molecularly confirmed MEN2. Seven (10.3%) MTCs demonstrated positive staining. Six of these patients had already undergone germline RET mutation testing as part of clinical care and were all confirmed to be wild type, excluding the diagnosis of MEN2. All SP174 immunohistochemically positive MTCs were proven to have HRASQ61R mutation (and lack KRASQ61R and NRASQ61R) by Sanger sequencing. All MEN2 patients showed negative staining. We conclude that IHC with SP174 is highly specific for the HRASQ61R mutation in MTC. Because current data suggest that this mutation is mutually exclusive with germline RET mutation, IHC may also have a role in triaging formal genetic testing for MEN2.
Gut | 2017
Angela Chou; Danielle Froio; Adnan Nagrial; Ashleigh Parkin; Kendelle J. Murphy; Venessa T. Chin; Dalia Wohl; Angela Steinmann; Rhys Stark; Alison Drury; Stacey N. Walters; Claire Vennin; Andrew Burgess; Mark Pinese; Lorraine A. Chantrill; Mark J. Cowley; Timothy J. Molloy; Nicola Waddell; Amber L. Johns; Sean M. Grimmond; David K. Chang; Andrew V. Biankin; Owen J. Sansom; Jennifer P. Morton; Shane T. Grey; Thomas R. Cox; John Turchini; Jaswinder S. Samra; Stephen Clarke; Paul Timpson
Objective Extensive molecular heterogeneity of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA), few effective therapies and high mortality make this disease a prime model for advancing development of tailored therapies. The p16-cyclin D-cyclin-dependent kinase 4/6-retinoblastoma (RB) protein (CDK4) pathway, regulator of cell proliferation, is deregulated in PDA. Our aim was to develop a novel personalised treatment strategy for PDA based on targeting CDK4. Design Sensitivity to potent CDK4/6 inhibitor PD-0332991 (palbociclib) was correlated to protein and genomic data in 19 primary patient-derived PDA lines to identify biomarkers of response. In vivo efficacy of PD-0332991 and combination therapies was determined in subcutaneous, intrasplenic and orthotopic tumour models derived from genome-sequenced patient specimens and genetically engineered model. Mechanistically, monotherapy and combination therapy were investigated in the context of tumour cell and extracellular matrix (ECM) signalling. Prognostic relevance of companion biomarker, RB protein, was evaluated and validated in independent PDA patient cohorts (>500 specimens). Results Subtype-specific in vivo efficacy of PD-0332991-based therapy was for the first time observed at multiple stages of PDA progression: primary tumour growth, recurrence (second-line therapy) and metastatic setting and may potentially be guided by a simple biomarker (RB protein). PD-0332991 significantly disrupted surrounding ECM organisation, leading to increased quiescence, apoptosis, improved chemosensitivity, decreased invasion, metastatic spread and PDA progression in vivo. RB protein is prevalent in primary operable and metastatic PDA and may present a promising predictive biomarker to guide this therapeutic approach. Conclusion This study demonstrates the promise of CDK4 inhibition in PDA over standard therapy when applied in a molecular subtype-specific context.
Applied Immunohistochemistry & Molecular Morphology | 2017
John Turchini; Juliana Andrici; Loretta Sioson; Adele Clarkson; Nicole Watson; Christopher W. Toon; Phillip Shepherd; Daniel Ng; Amanda Dixon-mciver; Paul Oei; Anthony J. Gill
Anti–epidermal growth factor receptor–targeted therapy is only indicated in RAS wild-type colorectal carcinomas (CRCs). It is recommended that both NRAS and KRAS mutation testing to be performed before a CRC is considered RAS wild-type. Given that mutation-specific immunohistochemistry (IHC) has been shown to be sensitive and specific for the detection of NRASQ61R mutations in melanoma, we assessed the specificity of NRASQ61R mutation-specific IHC in CRC. IHC was performed on tissue microarrays containing 2823 consecutive CRC undergoing surgery with curative intent using a novel mutation-specific antibody to the protein produced by the NRASQ61R mutation (clone SP174). Tissue microarrays were assessed by 2 observers and all IHC-positive or equivocal cases were repeated on whole sections to confirm the result. Positive cases then underwent molecular testing by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight polymerase chain reaction. In total, 22 of 2823 (0.8%) CRCs demonstrated confirmed positive staining with complete interobserver concordance. RAS mutations were confirmed in all IHC-positive CRCs. In total, 11 cases harbored the NRASQ61R mutation. Surprisingly, 11 cases demonstrated the KRASQ61R mutation. We conclude that mutation-specific IHC with this currently available NRASQ61R antibody is highly specific for the presence of either NRASQ61R or KRASQ61R mutations in CRC. We caution that we did not assess the sensitivity of IHC and that this antibody does not detect other RAS mutations. Therefore, negative staining does not exclude a clinically significant RAS mutation. However, positive staining confirms the presence of an NRASQ61R or KRASQ61R mutation without the need for further molecular testing.
Human Pathology | 2016
Jennifer Wang; Juliana Andrici; Loretta Sioson; Adele Clarkson; Amy Sheen; Mahtab Farzin; Christopher W. Toon; John Turchini; Anthony J. Gill
SMARCB1 is a tumor suppressor gene that encodes for the protein INI1. SMARCB1 is commonly inactivated and INI1 correspondingly shows loss of expression in a range of malignant neoplasms including rhabdoid tumors, renal medullary carcinomas, and epithelioid sarcomas. Loss of INI1 expression has recently been reported in occasional gastrointestinal adenocarcinomas. We sought to investigate the incidence and clinicopathological significance of INI1 loss in colorectal adenocarcinoma (CRC). Immunohistochemistry for INI1 was performed in tissue microarray (TMA) format on a well-characterized and unselected cohort of CRCs undergoing surgical resection. If staining was negative or equivocal in the TMA sections, immunohistochemistry was repeated on whole sections. Focal or widespread negative staining for INI1 was identified in whole sections from 14 (0.46%) of 3051 CRCs. In 7 (50%) of 14 negative cases, the loss of staining was focal, whereas the remainder were characterized by negative staining in all neoplastic cells in whole sections. In the cases with focal staining, loss of staining was frequently found in areas of poor differentiation. Global or focal INI1 loss was strongly associated with higher histological grade, larger tumor size and poor overall survival (P<.001). We conclude that INI1 loss occurs rarely (0.46% when screened by TMA) in CRC, where it is associated with higher grade, larger tumor size, poorer survival, mismatch repair deficiency, and BRAFV600E mutation.
Pathology | 2017
Fedaa Najdawi; Ashley Crook; Jayne Maidens; Christopher R. McEvoy; Andrew Fellowes; Justine Pickett; Musei Ho; David Nevell; Kirsten McIlroy; Amy Sheen; Loretta Sioson; Mahsa Seyed Ahadi; John Turchini; Adele Clarkson; Russell Hogg; Sue Valmadre; Greg Gard; Susan Dooley; Rodney J. Scott; Stephen B. Fox; Michael Field; Anthony J. Gill
Despite a trend towards universal testing, best practice to screen patients presenting with gynaecological malignancy for Lynch syndrome (LS) is uncertain. We report our institutional experience of a co-ordinated gynaecological LS screening program. All patients with endometrial carcinoma or carcinosarcoma, or gynaecological endometrioid or clear cell carcinomas undergo reflex four panel immunohistochemistry (IHC) for MLH1, PMS2, MSH2 and MSH6 followed by cascade somatic hypermethylation analysis of the MLH1 promoter locus for dual MLH1/PMS2 negative tumours. On the basis of these results, genetic counselling and targeted germline mutation testing is then offered to patients considered at high risk of LS. From 1 August 2013 to 31 December 2015, 124 patients were screened (mean age 64.6 years). Thirty-six (29.0%) demonstrated abnormal MMR IHC: 26 (72.2%) showed dual loss of MLH1/PMS2, five (13.9%) dual loss of MSH2/MSH6, three (8.3%) isolated loss of MSH6, and two (5.6%) isolated loss of PMS2. Twenty-five of 26 (96.1%) patients with dual MLH1/PMS2 loss demonstrated MLH1 promoter methylation. Therefore, 11 (8.9%) patients screened were classified as high risk for LS, of whom nine (81.8%) accepted germline mutation testing. Three (2.4% of total screened) were confirmed to have LS, two with germline PMS2 and one with germline MSH2 mutation. Massive parallel sequencing of tumour tissue demonstrated somatic mutations which were concordant with the IHC results in the remainder. Interestingly, the one MLH1/PMS2 IHC negative but not hypermethylated tumour harboured only somatic MLH1 mutations, indicating that universal cascade methylation testing in MLH1/PMS2 IHC negative tumours is very low yield and could be reconsidered in a resource-poor setting. In conclusion, universal screening for LS in patients presenting with gynaecological malignancy using the algorithm described above identified LS in three of 124 (2.4%) of our population. Only three of nine (33.3%) patients considered at high risk for LS by combined IHC and hypermethylation analysis were proven to have LS. Only one of the LS patients was less than 50 years of age and none of these patients would have been identified had more restrictive Amsterdam or Bethesda criteria been applied.
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2017
Justine Pickett; Angela Chou; Juliana Andrici; Adele Clarkson; Loretta Sioson; Amy Sheen; Jessica Reagh; Fedaa Najdawi; Yoomee Kim; Denise Riley; Jayne Maidens; David Nevell; Kirsten McIlroy; Susan Valmadre; Greg Gard; Russell Hogg; John Turchini; Gregory Robertson; Michael Friedlander; Anthony J. Gill
Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor (IMT) of the female genital tract is under-recognized. We investigated the prevalence of ALK-positive IMT in lesions previously diagnosed as gynecologic smooth muscle tumors. Immunohistochemistry (IHC) for ALK was performed on tissue microarrays of unselected tumors resected from 2009 to 2013. Three of 1176 (0.26%) “leiomyomas” and 1 of 44 (2.3%) “leiomyosarcomas” were ALK IHC positive, confirmed translocated by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and therefore more appropriately classified as IMT. On review significant areas of all 4 tumors closely mimicked smooth muscle tumors morphologically, but all showed at least subtle/focal features suggesting IMT. Recognizing that the distinction between IMT and leiomyoma/leiomyosarcoma can be subtle, we then reviewed 1 hematoxylin and eosin slide from each patient undergoing surgery for “leiomyoma” from 2014 to 2017 and selected cases for ALK IHC with a low threshold. Of these, 30 of 571 (5.3%) underwent IHC. Two were confirmed to be IHC positive and FISH rearranged. Of the 6 IMTs, only 1 tumor with a previous diagnosis of leiomyosarcoma, an infiltrative margin and equivocal necrosis, metastasized. Of note it demonstrated a less aggressive clinical course compared with most metastatic leiomyosarcomas (alive with disease at 6 y). The patient was subsequently offered crizotinib to which she responded rapidly. In conclusion, IMTs may closely mimic gynecologic smooth muscle tumors. IMTs account for at least 5 of 1747 (0.3%) tumors previously diagnosed as leiomyoma and 1 of 44 (2.3%) as leiomyosarcoma. These tumors may be recognized prospectively with awareness of subtle/focal histologic clues, coupled with a low threshold for ALK IHC.
Ejso | 2018
Christopher B. Nahm; John Turchini; Nigel B. Jamieson; Elizabeth Moon; Loretta Sioson; Malinda Itchins; Jennifer Arena; Emily K. Colvin; Viive M. Howell; Nick Pavlakis; Stephen Clarke; Jaswinder S. Samra; Anthony J. Gill; Anubhav Mittal
BACKGROUND Up to 60% of patients who undergo curative-intent pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) resection experience disease recurrence within six months. We recently published a systematic review of prognostic immunohistochemical biomarkers in PDAC and shortlisted a panel of those reported with the highest level of evidence, including p53, p16, Ca-125, S100A4, FOXC1, EGFR, mesothelin, CD24 and UPAR. This study aims to discover and validate the prognostic significance of a combinatorial panel of tumor biomarkers in patients with resected PDAC. METHODS Patients who underwent PDAC resection were included from a single institution discovery cohort and a multi-institutional validation cohort. Tumors in the discovery cohort were stained immunohistochemically for all nine shortlisted biomarkers. Biomarkers significantly associated with overall survival (OS) were reevaluated as a combinatorial panel in both discovery and validation cohorts for its prognostic significance. RESULTS 224 and 191 patients were included in the discovery and validation cohorts, respectively. In both cohorts, S100A4, Ca-125 and mesothelin expression were associated with shorter OS. In both cohorts, the number of these biomarkers expressed was significantly associated with OS (discovery cohort 36.8 vs. 26.4 vs 16.3 vs 12.8 months, P < 0.001; validation cohort 25.2 vs 18.3 vs 13.6 vs 11.9 months, P = 0.008 for expression of zero, one, two and three biomarkers, respectively). On multivariable analysis, expression of at least one of three biomarkers was independently associated with shorter OS. CONCLUSION Combinations of S100A4, Ca-125 and mesothelin expression stratify survival after resection of localized PDAC. Co-expression of all three biomarkers is associated with the poorest prognostic outcome.
Modern Pathology | 2017
Angela Chou; Ondrej Hes; John Turchini; Kiril Trpkov; Anthony J. Gill
Do significant TFE3 gene rearrangements occur in succinate dehydrogenase-deficient renal cell carcinoma? Borderline FISH results should be interpreted with caution