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Solitary Fibrous Tumour

Solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) is a fibroblastic tumor characterized by a prominent, branching, thin-walled, dilated (staghorn) vasculature and NAB2-STAT6 gene rearrangement.

Symptoms & Causes

Introduction

Solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) is a rare type of tumor that originates from fibrous tissue. It’s characterized by its unique blood vessel structure (staghorn-shaped) and a specific genetic change called the NAB2-STAT6 gene fusion.

Reference
WHO Classification of Tumours Editorial Board. Soft tissue and bone tumours [Internet]. Lyon (France): International Agency for Research on Cancer; 2020 [cited 2024 09 11]. (WHO classification of tumours series, 5th ed.; vol. 3). Available from: https://tumourclassification.iarc.who.int/chapters/33.

Related Terminology
Not recommended: hemangiopericytoma; giant cell angiofibroma; benign solitary fibrous tumor.

Subtype(s)
Fat-forming (lipomatous) solitary fibrous tumor; giant cell-rich solitary fibrous tumor

Symptoms

Most tumors present as slow-growing, painless masses. Abdominopelvic tumors may present with distention (swelling), constipation, urinary retention, or early satiety (feeling full quickly), whereas head and neck SFTs may present with nasal obstruction, voice changes, or bleeding. Large SFTs may cause paraneoplastic syndromes such as Doege-Potter syndrome, with the induction of severe hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) or (more rarely) acromegaloid changes (enlargement of hands, feet, and face) due to tumor production of IGF2 (insulin-like growth factor 2). The radiographic features of SFT are largely nonspecific. CT demonstrates a well-defined, occasionally lobulated mass that is isodense to skeletal muscle, with heterogeneous contrast enhancement due to the extensive tumor vasculature. MRI shows intermediate intensity on T1-weighted images and variable hypointensity to hyperintensity on T2-weighted images, corresponding to fibrous and cellular or myxoid areas, respectively. Larger or aggressive cases may display increased heterogeneity due to fibrosis, hemorrhage, necrosis, myxoid and cystic degeneration, or calcifications.

Localization

SFTs may occur at any anatomical site, including superficial and deep soft tissues and within visceral organs and bone, and they are more common at extrapleural (outside the lining of the lungs) locations. About 30-40% of extrapleural SFTs arise in the extremities; 30-40% arise in deep soft tissues, the abdominal cavity, the pelvis, or the retroperitoneum (the space behind the abdominal cavity); 10-15% arise in the head and neck; and 10-15% arise in the trunk. Deep tumors are more common than superficial tumors, accounting for 70-90% of cases. In the head and neck, the sinonasal tract (the nasal cavity and sinuses) and orbit (the eye socket) are the most common sites, followed by the oral cavity and salivary glands.

Epidemiology

SFTs affect men and women equally and are most common in adults, with a peak incidence between 40 and 70 years.

Etiology

Unknown

Diagnosis & Treatment

Staging

Risk stratification models are preferred over anatomical staging.

Pathogenesis

The genetic hallmark of SFT is a paracentric inversion involving chromosome 12q, resulting in the fusion of the NAB2 and STAT6 genes. Some studies have shown a correlation between fusion types and histological features. The NAB2-STAT6 fusion is thought to convert wildtype NAB2 from a transcriptional repressor of EGR1-mediated signaling into a transcriptional activator via replacement of the C-terminal repression domain by the transcriptional activation domain of STAT6, thereby resulting in a feedforward loop of constitutive EGR1-mediated transactivation of proliferation and survival-associated growth factors, including IGF2 and FGFR1. Overexpression of ALDH1A1 (ALDH1), EGFR, JAK2, histone deacetylases, and retinoic acid receptor may also contribute to tumorigenesis. Other alterations associated with aggressive behavior and dedifferentiation include TERT promoter mutations and deletions or mutations of TP53.

Macroscopic appearance

SFTs are well-circumscribed masses that typically measure 5-10 cm, although some lesions may exceed 25 cm in greatest dimension. The cut surface is nodular and tan to reddish-brown, and it occasionally shows hemorrhage, myxoid change, or cystic degeneration.

Histopathology

SFTs are composed of haphazardly arranged spindled to ovoid cells with indistinct, pale eosinophilic cytoplasm within a variably collagenous stroma, admixed with branching and hyalinized staghorn-shaped (haemangiopericytomatous) blood vessels. There is a wide histological spectrum, ranging from paucicellular lesions with abundant stromal keloidal-type collagen to highly cellular tumors consisting of closely spaced cells with little or no intervening stroma. Myxoid change may be present. SFTs most often have low mitotic counts, without substantial nuclear pleomorphism or necrosis. tumors demonstrating a high mitotic count with or without increased cellularity, atypia, necrosis, and infiltrative growth have traditionally been termed malignant, but new risk stratification models more accurately predict prognosis. 

Fat-forming (lipomatous) SFT harbors a component of mature adipose tissue. Giant cell–rich SFT, formerly known as giant cell angiofibroma, shows features of conventional SFT with an admixed population of multinucleated giant cells within the stroma and lining pseudovascular spaces. Dedifferentiated (anaplastic) SFTs show transition to high-grade sarcoma with or without heterologous elements such as rhabdomyosarcoma or osteosarcoma. By immunohistochemistry, SFT typically shows strong and diffuse expression of CD34 and nuclear STAT6, but expression may be lost in dedifferentiated SFT.

Cytology

Cytological examination (studying cells under a microscope) reveals oval, elongated, or rounded cells with wispy cytoplasm and eosinophilic (pink-staining) collagenous stroma.

Prognosis and prediction

Recurrence (distant or local) occurs in 10-30% of SFTs, with 10-40% of recurrences reported after 5 years and rare recurrences seen after 15 years. TERT promoter mutations are more common in tumors with aggressive features, but they may also be seen in low-risk SFT. Various single clinical or histological features have been reported to correlate with metastatic or local recurrence potential in large series, including high mitotic count (> 2 mitoses/mm2, equating to > 4 mitoses per 10 high-power fields of 0.5 mm in diameter and 0.2 mm2 in area), tumor size, necrosis, patient age, tumor cellularity and nuclear pleomorphism, and tumor site. However, individual studies contradict one another regarding which specific features are important.

 

The development of multivariate risk models has resulted in improved prognostication over the traditional benign/malignant distinction. Of these models, the one most similar to the traditional definition of malignant SFT stratifies tumors into four risk tiers based on mitotic count, pleomorphism, and tumor cellularity. A set of risk calculators proposed by the French Sarcoma Group (FSG) incorporates clinical data (patient age, tumor site), pathological features (mitotic count), and history of radiotherapy to variously predict overall survival, local recurrence, and distant metastatic risk. The most widely used model for metastatic risk incorporates mitotic count (≥ 2 mitoses/mm2), patient age (≥ 55 years), and tumor size stratified by 5 cm tiers to classify tumors into low, intermediate, and high-risk groups. This model has been validated for both thoracic and extrathoracic SFTs; a subsequent refinement includes necrosis as a fourth variable, resulting in higher numbers of cases being classified as low-risk.

Clinical Features

Diagnostic molecular pathology

NAB2-STAT6 gene fusions are pathognomonic (specific indicators) for SFT. However, because NAB2 and STAT6 are in close proximity on chromosome 12q, detection of their fusion is difficult by conventional cytogenetic methods, and the diversity of breakpoints occurring in both exons and introns makes PCR-based detection of fusion variants difficult without multiplexed sequencing assays. STAT6 immunohistochemistry is a sensitive and specific surrogate for all fusions.

Essential and desirable diagnostic criteria

Essential: spindled to ovoid cells arranged around a branching and hyalinized vasculature; variable stromal collagen deposition; CD34 and/or STAT6 expression by immunohistochemistry.

Desirable (in selected cases): demonstration of NAB2-STAT6 gene fusion.

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