Main Content

Alveolar Rhabdomyosarcoma

Alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (ARMS) is a malignant neoplasm composed of a monomorphic population of primitive round cells showing skeletal muscle differentiation. The presence of either a PAX3-FOXO1 or a PAX7-FOXO1 fusion gene is detected in the majority of cases.

Symptoms & Causes

Introduction

Alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma is a highly aggressive soft tissue cancer characterized by primitive round cells with skeletal muscle differentiation, commonly involving specific genetic fusions.

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: mixed embryonal and alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma; fusion-negative alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma.

Subtype(s)
None

Symptoms

ARMS is a highly aggressive and rapidly growing malignant soft tissue tumor, presenting at diagnosis with distant or locoregional metastases via lymphatic or hematogenous spread in 25–30% of patients. Symptoms are typically related to tumor location and size. Head and neck tumors with meningeal extension often cause cranial nerve deficits, paraspinal tumors may result in spinal nerve compression, and perirectal or pelvic tumors may lead to constipation or symptoms of bowel obstruction. Primary disseminated tumors resembling leukemia may rarely occur.

Localization

ARMS most commonly arises in the deep soft tissue of the extremities. Other sites include the head and neck, paraspinal region, and perineal region.

Epidemiology

ARMS is the second most common type of rhabdomyosarcoma, constituting about 25% of these tumors. ARMS occurs in a slightly older population than embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma (ERMS), with a peak incidence among individuals aged 10–25 years and roughly equal incidence in male and female patients. A subset of cases has also been observed in adults aged > 40 years.

Etiology

Unknown

Diagnosis & Treatment

Staging

See section Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma.

Pathogenesis

A t(2;13)(q36;q14) translocation is found in the majority of ARMSs, and a t(1;13)(p36;q14) is seen in a smaller subset. These translocations juxtapose PAX3 (at 2q36.1) or PAX7 (at 1p36.13) with the FOXO1 gene at 13q14.11, to generate chimeric genes that encode PAX3-FOXO1 and PAX7-FOXO1 fusion proteins. PAX3 and PAX7 represent transcription factors that play essential roles in myogenesis. The PAX-FOXO1 fusion proteins function as oncoproteins affecting growth, survival, differentiation, and other pathways through activation of numerous downstream target genes such as MET, ALK, FGFR4, MYCN, IGF1R, and MYOD1. Less common fusion gene variants include the fusion of PAX3 to FOXO4, NCOA1, or INO80D and the fusion of FOXO1 to FGFR1.

Amplification of genomic regions 2p24 (containing the MYCN oncogene) and 12q13-q14 (including CDK4) occur most often in PAX3-FOXO1 ARMSs, and amplification of regions 1p36 (which encompasses the PAX7 locus) and 13q31 (which includes MIR17HG) are associated specifically with PAX7-FOXO1 tumors. Analyses of individual genes in sporadic ARMS have implicated several important oncogenetic pathways. Inactivating mutations of TP53 and CDKN2A/CDKN2B and activating mutations of FGFR4 are present in a small subset. ALK gene copy-number gain and cytoplasmic overexpression of ALK protein occur in the vast majority of ARMSs; however, targeting this kinase in vivo does not yield therapeutic efficacy. The presence of recurrent somatic mutations (fusion-positive ARMSs have few to none) and distinct gene expression and DNA methylation profiles characterize fusion-positive and fusion-negative rhabdomyosarcomas (fusion-negative ARMS profiles are similar to those of ERMS).

Macroscopic Appearance

ARMS is soft, fleshy, and gray, with variable amounts of fibrous tissue and occasional necrotic areas and hemorrhage. Deep-seated tumors involving the musculature commonly infiltrate surrounding tissues.

Histopathology

ARMS is highly cellular and composed of primitive round cells with scant cytoplasm and hyperchromatic nuclei. Tumor cells are arranged in nests separated by fibrovascular septa, which frequently exhibit loss of cellular cohesion in the center, conferring a pattern of irregular alveolar spaces and a varying degree of cystic change. The solid subtype of ARMS is composed of sheets of neoplastic cells that have cytomorphological features of ARMS but lack septa or discohesion. Mitotic activity is often brisk. Occasionally, recognizable rhabdomyoblastic differentiation can be discerned. Multinucleated tumor giant cells are a common feature of ARMS. Rare cases may show clear cell morphology, with pale-staining and glycogen-containing cytoplasm. Tumors with mixed embryonal and alveolar features were previously considered to be a subtype of ARMS, but most such cases lack PAX-FOXO1 fusions, thus appearing to be clinically and biologically more akin to ERMS. However, fusion genes have been detected in rare cases of so-called mixed ERMS/ARMS, which therefore represent examples of ARMS.

Rhabdomyoblastic differentiation of ARMS is shown immunohistochemically with positive reactions to desmin, myogenin, and MYOD1. The nuclear expression of myogenin is strong and diffuse, unlike in ERMS and other rhabdomyosarcoma subtypes in which the staining pattern is focal. MYOD1 expression may be focal. Occasional expression of keratin or neuroendocrine markers (CD56, synaptophysin, and chromogranin) may also be observed.

Cytology

Fine-needle biopsies are highly cellular and consist of uniform round cells with scant cytoplasm and variable rhabdomyoblastic differentiation. Wreath-like multinucleated giant cells are a common feature.

Prognosis and Prediction

Risk stratification predictive of outcome has been addressed with surgicopathological staging and fusion-based classification (the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma Study Group [IRSG] grouping system). The prognosis for patients with fusion-positive ARMS is worse than for those with fusion-negative rhabdomyosarcoma and ERMS, and the prognosis for patients with PAX3-FOXO1 ARMS is inferior to that for patients with PAX7-FOXO1 ARMS. Amplification of MYCN, CDK4, and MIR17HG has also been correlated with poor outcomes.

Clinical Features

Diagnostic Molecular Pathology

Approximately 85% of histologically diagnosed ARMSs contain characteristic fusion genes. In fusion-positive ARMSs, PAX3-FOXO1 and PAX7-FOXO1 account for about 70–90% and 10–30% of the fusions, respectively. Rare cases show alternative novel gene fusions (see Pathogenesis, above), which can be detected by various molecular strategies. The absence of one of these gene fusions suggests a diagnosis of ERMS with a primitive phenotype (formerly known as fusion-negative ARMS or mixed ERMS–ARMS).

Essential and Desirable Diagnostic Criteria

Essential: uniform primitive round cell morphology with features of arrested myogenesis; an alveolar growth pattern is common but not required; strong, homogeneous nuclear immunoexpression for myogenin; heterogeneous staining for desmin and/or MYOD1; detection of PAX3/7-FOXO1 fusion genes by molecular analysis.

ribbon

Make a Donation

Help us move closer to a world where people do not die from sarcoma

Make a Donation
ribbon

section