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Author

Suneetha Chintalapati

Other affiliations: University of Texas at Dallas
Bio: Suneetha Chintalapati is an academic researcher from University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Pathology. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 4 publications receiving 15 citations. Previous affiliations of Suneetha Chintalapati include University of Texas at Dallas.
Topics: Cancer, Pathology, TSC1, CD117, Renal cell carcinoma

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work developed a model of tumor evolution, which revealed converging evolutionary trajectories into an aggressive type, and discovered several novel ccRCC phenotypes, developed an integrated taxonomy, and identified features that improve current prognostic models.

30 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe 22 low-grade oncocytic tumor (LOT) cases corresponding to 7 patients presenting with a median age of 75 years (range 63-86 years) and male to female ratio 2:5.

23 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the determinants of vascular invasion and metastasis in a unique cohort of renal cell carcinomas (RCC) patients with tumor thrombi (TT) using multi-region genomics and in vivo models.
Abstract: Metastasis is the principal cause of cancer related deaths. Tumor invasion is essential for metastatic spread. However, determinants of invasion are poorly understood. We addressed this knowledge gap by leveraging a unique attribute of kidney cancer. Renal tumors invade into large vessels forming tumor thrombi (TT) that migrate extending sometimes into the heart. Over a decade, we prospectively enrolled 83 ethnically-diverse patients undergoing surgical resection for grossly invasive tumors at UT Southwestern Kidney Cancer Program. In this study, we perform comprehensive histological analyses, integrate multi-region genomic studies, generate in vivo models, and execute functional studies to define tumor invasion and metastatic competence. We find that invasion is not always associated with the most aggressive clone. Driven by immediate early genes, invasion appears to be an opportunistic trait attained by subclones with diverse oncogenomic status in geospatial proximity to vasculature. We show that not all invasive tumors metastasize and identify determinants of metastatic competency. TT associated with metastases are characterized by higher grade, mTOR activation and a particular immune contexture. Moreover, TT grade is a better predictor of metastasis than overall tumor grade, which may have implications for clinical practice. Tumour thrombi (TT) are intravascular extensions of renal cell carcinomas (RCC) which often lead to distant metastases. Here the authors examine the determinants of vascular invasion and metastasis in a unique cohort of RCC patients with TT using multi-region genomics and in vivo models.

14 citations


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors in this article reviewed recent advances in renal neoplasia, particularly post-2016 World Health Organization (WHO) classification, to provide an update on existing entities, including diagnostic criteria, molecular correlates, and updated nomenclature.

113 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: RCC metastatic to the pancreas is characterized by indolent biology, heightened angiogenesis, and an uninflamed stroma, likely underlying its good prognosis, sensitivity to antiangiogenic therapies, and refractoriness to ICI.
Abstract: Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is characterized by a particularly broad metastatic swath, and, enigmatically, when the pancreas is a destination, the disease is associated with improved survival. Intrigued by this observation, we sought to characterize the clinical behavior, therapeutic implications, and underlying biology. While pancreatic metastases (PM) are infrequent, we identified 31 patients across 2 institutional cohorts and show that improved survival is independent of established prognostic variables, that these tumors are exquisitely sensitive to antiangiogenic agents and resistant to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), and that they are characterized by a distinctive biology. Primary tumors of patients with PM exhibited frequent PBRM1 mutations, 3p loss, and 5q amplification, along with a lower frequency of aggressive features such as BAP1 mutations and loss of 9p, 14q, and 4q. Gene expression analyses revealed constrained evolution with remarkable uniformity, reduced effector T cell gene signatures, and increased angiogenesis. Similar findings were observed histopathologically. Thus, RCC metastatic to the pancreas is characterized by indolent biology, heightened angiogenesis, and an uninflamed stroma, likely underlying its good prognosis, sensitivity to antiangiogenic therapies, and refractoriness to ICI. These data suggest that metastatic organotropism may be an indicator of a particular biology with prognostic and treatment implications for patients.

50 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
08 Oct 2021-Genes
TL;DR: A detailed understanding of the pathologic features of these distinctive tumors, which include chromophobe-like features and eosinophilia, with some of the tumors unclassified, is provided in this paper.
Abstract: Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is an autosomal dominant disorder in which renal manifestations are prominent. There are three major renal lesions in TSC: angiomyolipomas, cysts, and renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Major recent advances have revolutionized our understanding of TSC-associated RCC, including two series that together include more than 100 TSC-RCC cases, demonstrating a mean age at onset of about 36 years, tumors in children as young as 7, and a striking 2:1 female predominance. These series also provide the first detailed understanding of the pathologic features of these distinctive tumors, which include chromophobe-like features and eosinophilia, with some of the tumors unclassified. This pathologic heterogeneity is distinctive and reminiscent of the pathologic heterogeneity in Birt–Hogg–Dube-associated RCC, which also includes chromophobe-like tumors. Additional advances include the identification of sporadic counterpart tumors that carry somatic TSC1/TSC2/mTOR mutations. These include unclassified eosinophilic tumors, eosinophilic solid cystic RCC (ESC-RCC), and RCC with leiomyomatous stroma (RCCLMS). A variety of epithelial renal neoplasms have been identified both in patients with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) and in the nonsyndromic setting associated with somatic mutations in the TSC1 and TSC2 genes. Interestingly, whether tumors are related to a germline or somatic TSC1/2 mutation, these tumors often display similar morphologic and immunophenotypic features. Finally, recent work has identified molecular links between TSC and BHD-associated tumors, involving the TFEB/TFE3 transcription factors.

19 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: SAbR has the potential to extend the the duration of current systemic therapy for selected patients with mRCC, preserving subsequent therapies for later administration possibly enabling longer treatment duration.
Abstract: Purpose Oligoprogression, defined as limited sites of progression on systemic therapy, in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) is not uncommon, possibly because of inter- and intratumoral heterogeneity. We evaluated the effect of stereotactic ablative radiation therapy (SAbR) for longitudinal control of oligoprogressive mRCC. Methods and Materials Patients with extracranial mRCC were included in this retrospective analysis if they progressed in ≤3 sites on systemic therapy while demonstrating response/stability at other sites and received SAbR to all progressing sites without switching systemic therapy. Our primary endpoint was modified progression-free survival (mPFS), which we calculated from the start of SAbR to the start of a subsequent systemic therapy, death, or loss to follow-up. Results We identified 36 patients with a median follow-up of 20.4 months (interquartile range, 10.9-29.4). Forty-three sites were treated with SAbR with a median dose of 36 Gy (range, 18-50) in 3 fractions (range, 1-5). Median time to SAbR from the start of systemic therapy was 11.4 months (interquartile range, 6.1-17.1). Median mPFS was 9.2 months (95% confidence interval [CI], 5.9-13.2). Patients receiving SAbR while on immunotherapy exhibited a longer median mPFS (>28.4 months, log-rank P = .0001) than patients not on immunotherapy (9.2 months). Median overall survival from SAbR administration was 43.4 months (95% CI, 21.5-not Reached). The 1-year local control rate was 93% (95% CI, 78.7-97.5). Most SAbR-related toxicities were grade 1 to 2 (33% of patients), with one grade 5 hemoptysis event possibly related to SAbR or disease progression. Conclusions SAbR has the potential to extend the the duration of current systemic therapy for selected patients with mRCC, preserving subsequent therapies for later administration possibly enabling longer treatment duration.

17 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
16 Nov 2020-Cancers
TL;DR: Data is presented that support that the fibroblast activation protein-α (FAP), a CAF biomarker, provides interesting information both in tumour tissues and in plasma from patients with RCC, and point to CAF-related proteins as promising immunohistochemical biomarkers for the differential diagnosis of ChRCC and RO.
Abstract: (1) Background: Renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is a heterogeneous and complex disease with only partial response to therapy, high incidence of metastasis and recurrences, and scarce reliable biomarkers indicative of progression and survival. Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) play an important role supporting and promoting renal cancer progression. (2) Methods: In this study, we analysed fibroblast activation protein-α (FAP) immunohistochemical expression and its soluble isoform (sFAP) in tumour tissues and plasma from 128 patients with renal tumours. (3) Results: FAP is expressed in the cell surface of CAFs of the tumour centre and infiltrating front from clear cell renal cell carcinomas (CCRCC, n = 89), papillary renal cell carcinomas (PRCC, n = 21), and chromophobe renal cell carcinomas (ChRCC, n = 8), but not in the benign tumour renal oncocytoma (RO, n = 10). A high expression of FAP and low levels sFAP are significantly associated with high tumour diameter, high grade, and high pT stage, lymph node invasion, development of early metastases, and worse 5-year cancer specific survival of CCRCC patients. (4) Conclusions: These findings corroborate the potential usefulness of FAP immunohistochemistry and plasma sFAP as a biomarker of CCRCC progression and point to CAF-related proteins as promising immunohistochemical biomarkers for the differential diagnosis of ChRCC and RO.

15 citations