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Uterine MEIS1::NCOA2 Fusion Sarcoma With Lung Metastasis: A Case Report and Review of the Literature.

Deyin XingChristian F MeyerJohn M GrossPedram ArganiChien-Fu HungT-C WuRussell VangDeborah K ArmstrongStéphanie L Gaillard
Published in: International journal of gynecological pathology : official journal of the International Society of Gynecological Pathologists (2023)
MEIS1::NCOA1/2 fusion sarcomas are a recently described novel entity arising in a variety of locations with a predilection for the genitourinary tract and gynecologic organs. Despite multiple locoregional recurrences, these tumors are thought to behave in a low-grade malignant manner. Here we report a uterine MEIS1::NCOA2 fusion sarcoma with lung metastasis. The patient was a 47-yr-old woman with a history of abnormal uterine bleeding who was found to have a myometrial mass confirmed by pathology to be uterine sarcoma. The tumor was predominantly composed of monotonous spindle cells with scant cytoplasm, crowded nuclei, and brisk mitotic activity, growing in a fascicular and streaming pattern. The morphologic and immunophenotypic features were nonspecific and a diagnosis of high-grade uterine sarcoma with a differential of leiomyosarcoma versus high-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma was rendered. At the 27-mo follow-up, the patient was found to have a lung metastasis consisting of a monotonous round cell sarcoma. A retrospective RNA-based and DNA-based next-generation sequencing of the primary uterine sarcoma revealed a MEIS1::NCOA2 gene fusion, a c.94G>C/p.D32H mutation in exon 3 of CTNNB1 gene, HMGA2, and CDK4 gene amplification, and an intermediate/marginal level of MDM2 gene amplification. Polymerase chain reaction-based molecular analysis further demonstrated that the MEIS1::NCOA2 gene fusion and CTNNB1 somatic mutation were also present in the lung metastasis. This case represents the first case of such gynecologic sarcoma with distant (lung) metastasis, and the second metastatic case among all reported MEIS1::NCOA1/2 fusion sarcomas, highlighting the malignant metastatic potential of this emerging entity. Our case also indicates that HMGA2/CDK4/MDM2 region amplification and CTNNB1 somatic mutation might be recurrent genetic events in this rare sarcoma subtype.
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