Frontiers in Endocrinology (May 2021)

Epigenomics in Hurthle Cell Neoplasms: Filling in the Gaps Towards Clinical Application

  • Sule Canberk,
  • Sule Canberk,
  • Sule Canberk,
  • Ana Rita Lima,
  • Ana Rita Lima,
  • Ana Rita Lima,
  • Mafalda Pinto,
  • Mafalda Pinto,
  • Paula Soares,
  • Paula Soares,
  • Paula Soares,
  • Paula Soares,
  • Valdemar Máximo,
  • Valdemar Máximo,
  • Valdemar Máximo,
  • Valdemar Máximo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2021.674666
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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It has been widely described that cancer genomes have frequent alterations to the epigenome, including epigenetic silencing of various tumor suppressor genes with functions in almost all cancer-relevant signalling pathways, such as apoptosis, cell proliferation, cell migration and DNA repair. Epigenetic alterations comprise DNA methylation, histone modification, and microRNAs dysregulated expression and they play a significant role in the differentiation and proliferation properties of TC. In this review, our group assessed the published evidence on the tumorigenic role of epigenomics in Hurthle cell neoplasms (HCN), highlighting the yet limited, heteregeneous and non-validated data preventing its current use in clinical practice, despite the well developed assessment techniques available. The identified evidence gaps call for a joint endeavour by the medical community towards a deeper and more systematic study of HCN, aiming at defining epigenetic markers in early diagnose, allowing for accurate stratification of maligancy and disease risk and for effective systemic treatment.

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