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High-Grade Sarcomas with Myogenic Differentiation Harboring Hotspot PDGFRBMutations

Authors :
Dermawan, Josephine K.
Chiang, Sarah
Hensley, Martee L.
Tap, William D.
Antonescu, Cristina R.
Source :
Modern Pathology; May 2023, Vol. 36 Issue: 5
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

PDGFRB-activating mutations have been reported in pediatric myofibroma and myofibromatosis. However, recurrent gain-of-function PDGFRBmutations have not been documented in sarcomas with myogenic differentiation. Driven by occasional sarcomas harboring PDGFRBmutations, we investigated their prevalence and clinicopathologic and genomic features in a large cohort of sarcomas. An institutional targeted DNA next-generation sequencing database was searched for sarcomas with myogenic differentiation harboring hotspot PDGFRBgene alterations. Among 3300 patients with sarcomas, 21 (0.6%) patients were identified (17 women, 4 men) with an age range of 35 to 88 years. The site distribution included 13 gynecologic tract (12 uteri, 1 vagina), 4 bone and soft tissue, and 4 viscera. All except 1 were high grade. Most patients were diagnosed as sarcomas with myogenic differentiation based on partial staining for 1 or more muscle markers, whereas 6 were labeled as leiomyosarcoma (LMS). Most tumors showed monomorphic spindle morphology, with either heterogeneous features of myofibroblastic and smooth muscle differentiation or an undifferentiated phenotype. Hormone receptors were negative in all uterine cases. PDGFRB immunostaining in all cases tested was strong and diffuse, whereas PDGFRA was negative/focal. The most frequent PDGFRBmutations were exon 12 (43%), exon 14 (N666K/S/T) (38%), and exon 18 (D850Y/H/V or insertion/deletion) (19%). The most frequent co-existing genetic alterations (26% to 37%) occurred in CDKN2A/B, TP53, TERT, and MED12. Moreover, PDGFRB-mutant sarcomas had an overall distinct genomic landscape compared with both uterine and soft tissue LMS control groups. These tumors were associated with a highly aggressive clinical course, with frequent distant metastases (81%) and death (76%), regardless of anatomic location, and worse overall survival compared with the 2 LMS control groups. This is the first study documenting recurrent hotspot PDGFRBalterations in high-grade sarcomas, which show a predilection for uterine location and myogenic differentiation that fall short of the diagnostic criteria for LMS. Further studies are needed to investigate the therapeutic potential of kinase inhibitors in this group of tumors.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08933952 and 15300285
Volume :
36
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Modern Pathology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs62192649
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.modpat.2023.100104