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Clinical, Morphologic and Genomic Findings in ROS1 Fusion Spitz Neoplasms.

The presence of a characteristic chimeric fusion as the initiating genomic event is one defining feature of Spitz neoplasms. Characterization of specific subtypes of Spitz neoplasms allows for better recognition facilitating diagnosis. Data on clinical outcomes of the specific tumor types may help i...

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Autores principales: Gerami, Pedram, Kim, Daniel, Compres, Elsy V., Zhang, Bin, Khan, Ayesha U., Sunshine, Joel C., Quan, Victor L., Busam, Klaus
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7855005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32862201
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41379-020-00658-w
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author Gerami, Pedram
Kim, Daniel
Compres, Elsy V.
Zhang, Bin
Khan, Ayesha U.
Sunshine, Joel C.
Quan, Victor L.
Busam, Klaus
author_facet Gerami, Pedram
Kim, Daniel
Compres, Elsy V.
Zhang, Bin
Khan, Ayesha U.
Sunshine, Joel C.
Quan, Victor L.
Busam, Klaus
author_sort Gerami, Pedram
collection PubMed
description The presence of a characteristic chimeric fusion as the initiating genomic event is one defining feature of Spitz neoplasms. Characterization of specific subtypes of Spitz neoplasms allows for better recognition facilitating diagnosis. Data on clinical outcomes of the specific tumor types may help in predicting behavior. In this study we present the largest series to date on ROS1 fusion Spitz neoplasms. We present the clinical, morphologic and genomic features of 17 cases. We compared the morphologic features of these 17 cases to a cohort of 99 other non-ROS1 Spitz neoplasms to assess for features that may have high specificity for ROS1 fusions. These tumors consisted of 10 Spitz nevi and 7 Spitz tumors. None of the cases met criteria for a diagnosis of Spitz melanoma. Morphologically, the ROS1 fusion tumors of this series were characterized by a plaque-like or nodular silhouette, often densely cellular intraepidermal melanocyte proliferation, frequent pagetosis, tendency towards spindle cell cytomorphology, low grade nuclear atypia and floating nests with occasional transepidermal elimination. However, there was a significant range in microscopic appearances, including two cases with morphologic features of a desmoplastic Spitz nevus. Different binding partners to ROS1 were identified with PWWP2A and TPM3 being the most common. No case had a recurrence or metastasis. Our findings document that most ROS1 fusion Spitz neoplasms have some typical characteristic microscopic features, while a small proportion will have features overlapping with other genomic subtypes of Spitz neoplasms. Preliminary evidence suggests that they tend to be indolent or low grade neoplasms.
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spelling pubmed-78550052021-02-28 Clinical, Morphologic and Genomic Findings in ROS1 Fusion Spitz Neoplasms. Gerami, Pedram Kim, Daniel Compres, Elsy V. Zhang, Bin Khan, Ayesha U. Sunshine, Joel C. Quan, Victor L. Busam, Klaus Mod Pathol Article The presence of a characteristic chimeric fusion as the initiating genomic event is one defining feature of Spitz neoplasms. Characterization of specific subtypes of Spitz neoplasms allows for better recognition facilitating diagnosis. Data on clinical outcomes of the specific tumor types may help in predicting behavior. In this study we present the largest series to date on ROS1 fusion Spitz neoplasms. We present the clinical, morphologic and genomic features of 17 cases. We compared the morphologic features of these 17 cases to a cohort of 99 other non-ROS1 Spitz neoplasms to assess for features that may have high specificity for ROS1 fusions. These tumors consisted of 10 Spitz nevi and 7 Spitz tumors. None of the cases met criteria for a diagnosis of Spitz melanoma. Morphologically, the ROS1 fusion tumors of this series were characterized by a plaque-like or nodular silhouette, often densely cellular intraepidermal melanocyte proliferation, frequent pagetosis, tendency towards spindle cell cytomorphology, low grade nuclear atypia and floating nests with occasional transepidermal elimination. However, there was a significant range in microscopic appearances, including two cases with morphologic features of a desmoplastic Spitz nevus. Different binding partners to ROS1 were identified with PWWP2A and TPM3 being the most common. No case had a recurrence or metastasis. Our findings document that most ROS1 fusion Spitz neoplasms have some typical characteristic microscopic features, while a small proportion will have features overlapping with other genomic subtypes of Spitz neoplasms. Preliminary evidence suggests that they tend to be indolent or low grade neoplasms. 2020-08-29 2021-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7855005/ /pubmed/32862201 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41379-020-00658-w Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Gerami, Pedram
Kim, Daniel
Compres, Elsy V.
Zhang, Bin
Khan, Ayesha U.
Sunshine, Joel C.
Quan, Victor L.
Busam, Klaus
Clinical, Morphologic and Genomic Findings in ROS1 Fusion Spitz Neoplasms.
title Clinical, Morphologic and Genomic Findings in ROS1 Fusion Spitz Neoplasms.
title_full Clinical, Morphologic and Genomic Findings in ROS1 Fusion Spitz Neoplasms.
title_fullStr Clinical, Morphologic and Genomic Findings in ROS1 Fusion Spitz Neoplasms.
title_full_unstemmed Clinical, Morphologic and Genomic Findings in ROS1 Fusion Spitz Neoplasms.
title_short Clinical, Morphologic and Genomic Findings in ROS1 Fusion Spitz Neoplasms.
title_sort clinical, morphologic and genomic findings in ros1 fusion spitz neoplasms.
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7855005/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32862201
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41379-020-00658-w
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