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Primary Intracranial Spindle Cell Sarcoma, DICER1-Mutant, with MDM2 Amplification Diagnosed on the Basis of Extensive Molecular Profiling

Primary intracranial spindle cell sarcoma is an extremely rare mesenchymal tumor, the molecular pathogenesis of which is poorly understood. Because of the lack of specific markers, diagnosis sometimes relies on ruling out all possible differential diagnoses, often making it difficult to reach a defi...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Nejo, Takahide, Takayanagi, Shunsaku, Tanaka, Shota, Shinozaki-Ushiku, Aya, Kohsaka, Shinji, Nagata, Keisuke, Yokoyama, Munehiro, Sora, Shigeo, Ushiku, Tetsuo, Mukasa, Akitake, Aburatani, Hiroyuki, Mano, Hiroyuki, Saito, Nobuhito
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9580084/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36277904
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/11795476221131189
Descripción
Sumario:Primary intracranial spindle cell sarcoma is an extremely rare mesenchymal tumor, the molecular pathogenesis of which is poorly understood. Because of the lack of specific markers, diagnosis sometimes relies on ruling out all possible differential diagnoses, often making it difficult to reach a definitive diagnosis. In this case study, we report a 69 year-old female patient for whom the integration of multi-layered molecular analyses contributed to making the diagnosis. The disease exhibited aggressive clinical behavior, requiring two sequential surgeries because of rapid regrowth within a short period. Primary and recurrent tumors exhibited similar histological features, in which spindle-shaped cells arranged in interlacing fascicles without any specific architectures, implicating sarcomatous tumors. In immunohistochemistry testing, tumor cells were immunopositive for vimentin but lacked any specific findings that contribute to narrowing down the differential diagnoses. Seeking further diagnostic clues, we performed DNA methylation-based analysis. The copy number analysis revealed MDM2 gene amplification and loss of heterozygosity of 22q. Moreover, dimension reduction clustering analysis implicated a methylation pattern comparable to aggressive types of sarcomas. In addition, an in-house next-generation sequencing panel (“Todai-OncoPanel”) analysis identified somatic mutations in DICER1, NF2, and ATRX genes. Taken all together, we finally made the diagnosis of primary intracranial spindle cell sarcoma, DICER1-mutant, with MDM2 gene amplification. This case report suggests that even for the tumors with insufficient morphological and immuno-histological diagnostic clues, integration of multi-layered molecular analyses can contribute to making the diagnoses as well as to understanding the rare tumors by elucidating unexpected genetic and epigenetic features.