NR4A3 Fusions Characterize a Distinctive Peritoneal Mesothelial Neoplasm of Uncertain Biological Potential with Pure Adenomatoid/ Microcystic Morphology.
Abbas AgaimyLuka BrcicLaurence M BriskiYin Pun HungMichael MichalMichal MichalG Petur NielsenRobert StoehrAndrew E RosenbergPublished in: Genes, chromosomes & cancer (2022)
A focal adenomatoid-microcystic pattern is not uncommon in peritoneal mesothelioma, but tumors composed almost exclusively of this pattern are distinctly rare and have not been well characterized. A small subset of mesotheliomas (mostly in children and young adults) are characterized by gene fusions including EWSR1/FUS::ATF1, EWSR1::YY1, and NTRK and ALK rearrangements, and often have epithelioid morphology. Herein, we describe five peritoneal mesothelial neoplasms (identified via molecular screening of 7 histologically similar tumors) that are pure adenomatoid/ microcystic in morphology and unified by the presence of an NR4A3 fusion. Patients were three males and two females aged 31 to 70 years (median, 40 years). Three presented with multifocal/diffuse and two with a localized disease. The size of the individual lesions ranged from 1.5 to 8 cm (median, 4.7). The unifocal lesions originated in the small bowel mesentery and the mesosigmoid. Treatment included surgery, either alone (3) or combined with HIPEC (2), and neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy (one case each). At the last follow-up (6 - 13 months), all 5 patients were alive and disease-free. All tumors were morphologically similar, characterized by extensive sieve-like microcystic growth with bland-looking flattened cells lining variably sized microcystic spaces and lacked a conventional epithelioid or sarcomatoid component. Immunohistochemistry confirmed mesothelial differentiation, but most cases showed limited expression of D2-40 and calretinin. Targeted RNA sequencing revealed an NR4A3 fusion (fusion partners were EWSR1 in three cases and CITED2 and NIPBL in one case each). The nosology and behavior of this morphomolecularly defined novel peritoneal mesothelial neoplasm of uncertain biological potential and its distinction from adenomatoid variants of conventional mesothelioma merit further delineation as more cases become recognized. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- young adults
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- prognostic factors
- minimally invasive
- peritoneal dialysis
- small bowel
- lymph node
- poor prognosis
- copy number
- cell death
- radiation therapy
- rectal cancer
- coronary artery disease
- human immunodeficiency virus
- cell proliferation
- risk assessment
- hiv infected
- smoking cessation
- advanced non small cell lung cancer