Primary Pulmonary Myxoid Sarcoma With EWSR1-CREB1 Fusion (original) (raw)
The American Journal of Surgical Pathology, 2011
Abstract
We present clinicopathologic data on 10 pulmonary myxoid sarcomas, which are defined by distinctive histomorphologic features and characterized by a recurrent fusion gene, that appear to represent a distinct tumor entity at this site. The patients [7 female, 3 male; aged 27 to 67 y (mean, 45 y)] presented with local or systemic symptoms (n=5), symptoms from cerebral metastasis (1), or incidentally (2). Follow-up of 6 patients showed that 1 with brain metastasis died shortly after primary tumor resection, 1 developed a renal metastasis but is alive and well, and 4 are disease free after 1 to 15 years. All tumors involved pulmonary parenchyma, with a predominant endobronchial component in 8 and ranged from 1.5 to 4 cm. Microscopically, they were lobulated and composed of cords of polygonal, spindle, or stellate cells within myxoid stroma, morphologically reminiscent of extraskeletal myxoid chondrosarcoma. Four cases showed no or minimal atypia, 6 showed focal pleomorphism, and 5 had necrosis. Mitotic indices varied, with most tumors not exceeding 5/10 high-power fields. Tumors were immunoreactive for only vimentin and weakly focal for epithelial membrane antigen. Of 9 tumors, 7 were shown to harbor a specific EWSR1-CREB1 fusion by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and direct sequencing, with 7 of 10 showing EWSR1 rearrangement by fluorescence in situ hybridization. This gene fusion has been described previously in 2 histologically and behaviorally different sarcomas: clear cell sarcoma-like tumors of the gastrointestinal tract and angiomatoid fibrous histiocytomas; however, this is a novel finding in tumors with the morphology we describe and that occur in the pulmonary region.
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