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Pediatric Erythroid Sarcoma Diagnostically Confirmed by Identification of a Recurrent NFIA::CBFA2T3 Fusion.

Obianuju Mercy AneloJing MaJennifer L NearySelene C KooHiroto InabaSoniya N PintoNga Thi NguyenThach Ngoc HoangLan Ngoc BuiJeffery M KlcoGabriela GheorghePatrick R Blackburn
Published in: Genes, chromosomes & cancer (2024)
Erythroid sarcoma (ES) is exceedingly rare in the pediatric population with only a handful of reports of de novo cases, mostly occurring in the central nervous system (CNS) or orbit. It is clinically and pathologically challenging and can masquerade as a nonhematopoietic small round blue cell tumor. Clinical presentation of ES without bone marrow involvement makes diagnosis particularly difficult. We describe a 22-month-old female with ES who presented with a 2-cm mass involving the left parotid region and CNS. The presence of crush/fixation artifact from the initial biopsy made definitive classification of this highly proliferative and malignant neoplasm challenging despite an extensive immunohistochemical workup. Molecular studies including RNA-sequencing revealed a NFIA::CBFA2T3 fusion. This fusion has been identified in several cases of de novo acute erythroid leukemia (AEL) and gene expression analysis comparing this case to other AELs revealed a similar transcriptional profile. Given the diagnostically challenging nature of this tumor, clinical RNA-sequencing was essential for establishing a diagnosis.
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