Expanding the molecular spectrum of gene fusions in endometrial stromal sarcoma: Novel subunits of the chromatin remodeling complexes PRC2 and NuA4/TIP60 as alternative fusion partners.
Josephine Kam Tai K DermawanNooshin DashtiSarah ChiangGulisa TurashviliBrendan C DicksonLora H EllensonMartina KirchnerAlbrecht StenzingerGunhild MechtersheimerAbbas AgaimyCristina R AntonescuPublished in: Genes, chromosomes & cancer (2022)
Endometrial stromal sarcomas (ESS) are morphologically and molecularly heterogeneous. We report novel gene fusions (EPC1::EED, EPC1::EZH2, ING3::PHF1) identified by targeted RNA sequencing in five cases. The ING3::PHF1-fusion positive ESS presented in a 58-year-old female as extrauterine mesocolonic, ovarian masses, and displayed large, monomorphic ovoid-to-epithelioid cells arranged in solid sheets. The patient remained alive with disease 13 months after surgery. The three ESS with EPC1::EED occurred in the uterine corpus in patients with a median age of 58 years (range 27-62 years). One tumor showed a uniform epithelioid nested morphology, while the other two were composed of monomorphic spindle cells in fascicles with elevated mitotic figures, focal tumor cell necrosis, and lymphovascular invasion. At a median follow-up of 20 months, two patients developed local recurrence, including one with concomitant distant metastasis, while one patient remained free of disease. All three patients were alive at the last follow-up. The EPC1::EZH2-fusion positive ESS presented in a 52-year-old female in the uterus, and displayed uniform spindled cells arranged in short fascicles, with focally elevated mitotic activity but without necrosis. The patient remained free of disease 3 months after surgery. All cases were diffusely positive for CD10; four diffusely express estrogen and progesterone receptors. Our study expands the molecular spectrum of EPC1 and PHF1-related gene fusions in ESS to include additional novel subunits of the PRC2 and/or NuA4/TIP60 complexes. These cases displayed a monomorphic epithelioid or spindled phenotype, spanning low-grade and high-grade cytomorphology, all expressing CD10 and commonly ER and PR, and are prone to local and/or distant spread.
Keyphrases
- high grade
- low grade
- induced apoptosis
- end stage renal disease
- cell cycle arrest
- newly diagnosed
- case report
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- single cell
- genome wide
- gene expression
- peritoneal dialysis
- copy number
- lymph node
- prognostic factors
- transcription factor
- long non coding rna
- magnetic resonance imaging
- stem cells
- endometrial cancer
- estrogen receptor
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- cell cycle
- single molecule
- cell therapy
- hiv infected