Back to Search Start Over

RARE-08. GRADING CONSIDERATIONS FOR MENINGEAL SOLITARY FIBROUS TUMOR/HEMANGIOPERICYTOMA

Authors :
Daniel J. Brat
Priscilla K. Brastianos
Fabio Ferrarese
Sabrina Rossi
Andrew Guajardo
David R. Raleigh
Ashley Wu
Brian M. Alexander
Arie Perry
Florian Haller
Fausto J. Rodriguez
Kassandra Jensch
Sarah M. Jenkins
Caterina Giannini
Paul D. Brown
José E. Velázquez Vega
Karen J. Fritchie
Michael J. Link
Sandro Santagata
David N. Louis
Alexander Kaplan
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2018.

Abstract

Meningeal solitary fibrous tumor (SFT)/hemangiopericytoma (HPC) is a rare tumor with propensity for recurrence and metastasis. We compared the WHO 2016 CNS tumor classification (CNS-G), a 3-tier system based on histopathologic phenotype and mitotic count, to the WHO 2013 Soft Tissue classification (ST-G), a 2-tier system based on mitotic count alone, in a cohort of 133 patients (59 female, 74 male; mean age 54 years [range 20–87]) with meningeal SFT/HPC. Tumors were pathologically confirmed through review of the first tumor resection (n=97), local recurrence (n=35) or distant metastasis (n=1). STAT6 immunostain showed nuclear expression in 132 cases. NAB2-STAT6 fusion was detected in 99 (of 111) successfully tested tumors (89%) including the lone STAT6 immunonegative tumor. Tumors were classified as grade 1 (n=43), 2(n=41) or 3 (n=49) using the CNS-G, and SFT (n=84) or malignant SFT (n=49) by using the ST-G. Necrosis was present in 16 cases (12%). On followup, 42 patients had at least 1 subsequent recurrence, including 8 with metastases. 29 patients died. On univariate analysis necrosis (p=0.0018) and CNS-G or ST-G (p-value respectively 0.014, 0.0041) were significantly associated with recurrence-free (RFS) but not overall survival (OS). NAB2-STAT6 fusion type was not associated with RFS or OS. Ten-year RFS was 61, 58 and 34% for CNS-G 1,2 and 3 versus 59 and 34% for ST-G SFT and malignant SFT, respectively. Ten-year RFS was 0% and 56% for tumors with and without necrosis. Our data suggest that SFT/HPC are better stratified using a two-tiered grading scheme. On multivariate analysis, necrosis was an independent predictor of RFS (HR 2.9, p=0.016) while ST-G was not quite significant (HR=1.9, p=0.062), suggesting necrosis should be reintroduced among SFT/HPC grading criteria.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b9c6b089960d794bf9a044500e97f49c