Investigator

Jen‐Chieh Lee

Assistant Professor · National Taiwan University, Department of Pathology

JLJen‐Chieh Lee
Papers(2)
<scp> …An update of molecula…
Collaborators(10)
Jennifer A BennettMark SementsovMartin KöbelYow‐Shan LeeAndreas von DeimlingBrendan C DicksonCheng‐Han LeeChristian KoelscheDavid L KolinFelix K F Kommoss
Institutions(9)
National Taiwan Unive…The University of Chi…University Hospital H…University of CalgaryCathay General Hospit…University Of TorontoUniversity of AlbertaPathologisches Instit…Brigham and Women's H…

Papers

GREB1 ‐rearranged uterine tumour shares a common DNA methylation signature with ESR1 ‐rearranged UTROSCT

Background and objectives GREB1 ‐rearranged uterine tumours encompass a group of uterine mesenchymal tumours with varied histologic appearances. The fusion partners to GREB1 include NCOA1‐3, SS18 and NR4A3 . Given that some GREB1 ‐rearranged uterine tumours exhibit histologic features of uterine tumours resembling ovarian sex cord tumour (UTROSCT), there is a general belief that GREB1 ‐rearranged uterine mesenchymal tumours are part of the UTROSCT family. Methods In this study, we applied global DNA methylation and copy number analyses to a series of 10 GREB1‐ rearranged uterine tumours and 21 classic UTROSCTs (7 of which were molecularly confirmed to harbour ESR1::NCOA2/3 fusions). Results We found that GREB1 ‐rearranged uterine tumors show an overlap in their global methylation profiles with UTROSCT, including ESR1::NCOA2/3 positive cases. Together, these tumours form a DNA methylation cluster separate from uterine smooth muscle tumours (leiomyomas and leiomyosarcomas), endometrial stromal sarcomas (low‐grade and high‐grade), embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma and SMARCA4‐deficient uterine sarcomas. However, despite their epigenetic similarity, there were two notable differences. First, GREB1 ‐rearranged uterine tumours as a group displayed a greater degree of genomic complexity with more extensive copy number alterations than conventional UTROSCTs, including those harbouring ESR1::NCOA2/3 . Second, GREB1 ‐rearranged uterine tumours frequently lacked overt sex cord morphology: while all 7 ESR1::NCOA2/3 UTROSCTs demonstrated corded, nested, trabecular and/or tubular/sertoliform patterns, only 1 GREB1 ‐rearranged uterine tumour displayed a prominent trabecular pattern, with the remaining cases showing exclusively or predominantly diffuse/solid growth. Conclusions Overall, our findings confirm that GREB1 ‐rearranged uterine tumours are part of the UTROSCT spectrum, though they frequently exhibit a more diffuse growth pattern and a higher degree of genomic instability.

75Works
2Papers
11Collaborators
Biomarkers, TumorUterine NeoplasmsBone NeoplasmsSex Cord-Gonadal Stromal TumorsNeoplasm ProteinsTumor MicroenvironmentDiagnosis, Differential

Positions

2017–

Assistant Professor

National Taiwan University · Department of Pathology

2007–

Attending physician

National Taiwan University Hospital · Department of Pathology

2010–

Visiting researcher

Harvard Medical School · Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital

2006–

Chief resident

National Taiwan University Hospital · Department of Pathology

2004–

Teaching assistant

National Taiwan University College of Medicine · Department of Pathology

2003–

First year to third year resident

National Taiwan University Hospital · Department of Pathology

2002–

First year of resident

National Taiwan University Hospital · Department of Internal Medicine

Education

2015

Ph.D.

National Taiwan University College of Medicine · Institute of Pathology

2002

M.D.

National Taiwan University College of Medicine · School of Medicine