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Low-Grade Fibromyxoid Sarcoma

Low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma is a malignant fibroblastic neoplasm characterized by alternating collagenous and myxoid areas, deceptively bland spindle cells with a whorling growth pattern, and arcades of small blood vessels. These tumors consistently have either FUS-CREB3L2 or FUS-CREB3L1 gene fusions.

Symptoms & Causes

Introduction

Low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma is a malignant fibroblastic tumor marked by bland spindle cells in collagenous and myxoid areas, often with FUS-CREB3L2 or FUS-CREB3L1 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: hyalinizing spindle cell tumor with giant rosettes.

Subtype(s)
None

Symptoms

Presentation is typically with a painless mass. In many cases, the mass has reportedly been present for > 5 years.

Localization

The most common sites of involvement are the proximal extremities and trunk, usually subfascial in depth. Less common locations include central body sites (abdominal cavity, retroperitoneum, mediastinum) and superficial soft tissues, with the latter being affected relatively more commonly in children. Origin at other anatomical sites is rare.

Epidemiology

Although relatively rare among sarcomas, the true incidence of low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma may have been underestimated before the availability of ancillary diagnostic markers and due to its propensity to mimic other soft tissue neoplasms histologically. There is a slight male predilection, and tumors typically arise in young adults, but the overall age range is wide, and as many as 20% of cases occur in patients aged < 18 years.

Etiology

Unknown

Diagnosis & Treatment

Staging

American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) eighth-edition staging is appropriate.

Pathogenesis

The cytogenetic hallmark of low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma is the t(7;16)(q33;p11), which is present, often as the sole change, in two thirds of cases. Another 25% show supernumerary ring chromosomes. Both aberrations result in fusion of the 5′ part of the FUS gene in 16p11 with the 3′ part of CREB3L2 in 7q33; a chimeric FUS-CREB3L2 transcript is seen in > 90% of cases. Rare cases have one of the fusion variants FUS-CREB3L1 or EWSR1-CREB3L1. Apart from recurrent microdeletions in association with the t(7;16) chromosomal breakpoints and gain of 7q in cases with ring chromosomes, no recurrent genomic imbalances or single-nucleotide variants have been found in low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma. The chimeric FUS-CREB3L2 protein functions as an aberrant transcription factor, causing deregulated expression of CREB3L2 target genes. Many of these target genes, such as CD24 and MUC4, are shared with sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma, with which low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma overlaps with regard to underlying gene fusions but differs with regard to additional genomic imbalances.

Macroscopic Appearance

Grossly, low-grade fibromyxoid sarcomas are well-circumscribed, fibrous, and often focally mucoid. tumor size ranges from 1 to > 20 cm in greatest dimension.

Histopathology

Low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma is composed of collagenous hypocellular areas and more-cellular myxoid nodules. An abrupt transition between these two areas is typical. The tumor cells are bland, spindled, and sometimes plump, and they grow in short fascicles or in a whorling pattern. Mitotic activity is generally inconspicuous. Arcades of small vessels and arteriole-sized vessels with perivascular sclerosis are seen. Occasionally, the vessels have a haemangiopericytoma-like pattern. Approximately 30% of cases contain collagen rosettes – a central core of hyalinized collagen surrounded by a cuff of epithelioid tumor cells. In some cases, areas of sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma are present, reflecting the overlap between these two entities. Unusual features (< 10% of cases) include the presence of focal pleomorphism or nuclear atypia, hypercellularity, epithelioid or round cell features, and heterotopic ossification. By immunohistochemistry, tumor cells show strong, diffuse cytoplasmic expression of MUC4, an epithelial glycoprotein, in approximately 99% of cases. MUC4 is highly sensitive and specific for low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma and sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma among fibroblastic and neural tumors. Expression of EMA is present in 80% of cases and focal expression of SMA in approximately 30%.

Cytology

Not clinically relevant

Prognosis and Prediction

Although low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma shows low rates of recurrence and metastasis in the first 5 years after excision of the primary tumor (10% and 5%, respectively), rates are much higher with long-term follow-up. A large study with long follow-up showed recurrences, metastases, and death from disease in 64%, 45%, and 42% of patients, respectively. Metastases occurred as long as 45 years after primary excision (median: 5 years), and the median interval to tumor-related death was 15 years. The most common metastatic sites are lung and pleura. Histological features generally do not correlate with clinical behavior, although tumors with areas of sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma or round cell morphology tend to pursue a more aggressive clinical course, similar to that expected for sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma.

Clinical Features

Diagnostic Molecular Pathology

If MUC4 is negative or not available to confirm the diagnosis, identification of FUS-CREB3L2 (or other rare variants) offers molecular genetic support for the diagnosis.

Essential and Desirable Diagnostic Criteria

Essential: alternating fibrous and myxoid areas; bland spindle cells in a whorled or short fascicular growth pattern; diffuse strong MUC4 expression (in nearly all cases).

Desirable: FUS gene rearrangement (in selected cases).

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