TERT and TERT promoter in melanocytic neoplasms: current concepts in pathogenesis, diagnosis, and prognosis. Journal of cutaneous pathology Motaparthi, K., Kim, J., Andea, A. A., Missall, T. A., Novoa, R. A., Vidal, C. I., Fung, M. A., Emanuel, P. O. 2020

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Located on chromosome locus 5p15.33, telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT or hTERT) encodes the catalytic subunit of telomerase which permits lengthening and preservation of telomeres following mitosis. Mutations in TERT promoter (TERT-p) upregulate expression of TERT, allowing survival of malignant cells and tumor progression in wide variety of malignancies including melanoma. The objective of this review is to examine the roles of TERT and TERT-p in the pathogenesis, diagnosis, and prognostication of cutaneous melanoma.METHODS: All studies of TERT or TERT-p in cutaneous melanocytic neoplasms with the following inclusion criteria were reviewed: publication date between 2010-2019, English language, and series of =3 cases were reviewed for evidence supporting the role of TERT in pathogenesis, diagnosis, and prognosis prognosis. Studies with <3 cases or focused primarily on mucosal or uveal melanocytic tumors were excluded.RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: TERT-p mutations are frequent in chronic and non-chronic sun damage melanoma and correlate with adverse prognosis, inform pathogenesis, and may provide diagnostic support. While TERT-p mutations are uncommon in acral melanoma, TERT copy number gains and gene amplification predict reduced survival. Among atypical spitzoid neoplasms, TERT-p mutations identify biologically aggressive tumors and support the diagnosis of spitzoid melanoma. TERT-p methylation may have prognostic value in pediatric conventional melanoma and drive tumorigenesis in melanoma arising within congenital nevi. Lastly, TERT-p mutations may aid in the differentiation of recurrent nevi from recurrent melanoma. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

View details for DOI 10.1111/cup.13691

View details for PubMedID 32202662