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American Society of Clinical Oncology, JCO Precision Oncology, 6, 2022

DOI: 10.1200/po.22.00227

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Isolated MLH1 Loss by Immunohistochemistry Because of Benign Germline MLH1 Polymorphisms

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

PURPOSE Mismatch repair (MMR) immunohistochemistry (IHC) is frequently used to inform prognosis, select (immuno-)therapy, and identify patients for heritable cancer syndrome testing. However, false-negative and false-positive MMR IHC interpretations have been described. MATERIALS AND METHODS Following identification of discordant MMR IHC and DNA-based microsatellite instability testing in a patient with colorectal carcinoma, we retrospectively reviewed institutional archives to identify patient samples with similar discrepancies. RESULTS We report a patient with metastatic colorectal carcinoma who initially received immunotherapy on the basis of apparent isolated loss of MLH1 by IHC; notably, MLH1 promoter hypermethylation was negative. Subsequent evaluation of neoplastic tissue on a DNA-based targeted next-generation sequencing panel demonstrated microsatellite stability, low tumor mutational burden, and a benign MLH1 variant, MLH1 p.V384D, accompanied by loss of heterozygosity. The constellation of findings and repeat MLH1 IHC demonstrating retained expression using a different antibody-clone, supported reclassification of the neoplasm as MMR-proficient. Immunotherapy was discontinued, and cytotoxic chemotherapy was initiated. This index case of apparent discordance between MMR IHC and DNA-based microsatellite instability prompted a retrospective review of institutional archives to identify patient samples with similar discrepancies. Further evaluation of neoplasms harboring MLH1 p.V384D with loss of heterozygosity revealed systematic antibody-dependent interference. The review also identified a second IHC-interference candidate, MLH1 p.A441T. CONCLUSION This study confirms that rare germline polymorphisms can result in incorrect IHC results, potentially affecting selection of optimal therapy and the decision to pursue germline testing. This case further highlights the need for expert molecular pathologic review and communication between clinical and molecular oncology teams.