Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0268596 (EMA)
2,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report the case of a voluminous tumor of the adrenal diagnosed in a young pregnant woman at 26(th) week of amenorrhea. Morphologically, a soft white tumor with haemorragic areas was observed, made of sheets of monomorphous, medium sized, spindle-shaped to polygonal, with high mitotic activity. Tumorous cells expressed cytokeratins AE1/AE3, EMA, and CD99 (expression of vimentin is not relevant). Contemplated diagnoses included poorly differentiated synovialosarcoma, sarcomatoid carcinoma and Ewing tumor. Thanks to molecular biology, showing the specific transcript of Ewing/peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor (pPNET) EWS/FLI1, the diagnosis of this atypical tumor in an unusual location was performed. Indeed, 75% of Ewing tumors involve bones (especially, the diaphysis of long bones) and 20 to 25% soft tissues. Primitive visceral involvement is rare; less than 10 cases of adrenal involvement have been reported. The hypothesis that Ewing cell's origin is a mesenchymal stem cell, which may derive from neural crest cell, could explain the uncommon adrenal involvement. Diagnosis of Ewing tumor is based on pathologic and molecular findings, especially in atypical cases.
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PMID:[An unusual adrenal tumor: Ewing tumor]. 2134 85

Over the years, a wide clinicopathological spectrum has been identified within Ewing family of tumors (EFTs). As these tumors are chemosensitive, their correct and timely identification is necessary. The aims of this study were (1) to present the diverse clinicopathological and molecular profile of EFTs in our settings, (2) to identify a pragmatic approach for diagnosing EFTs, especially for application of ancillary techniques, namely RT-PCR for specific transcripts (EWS-FLI1, EWS-ERG) and FISH for EWSR1 gene rearrangement, in certain cases and (3) to show the utility of tissue microarray in establishing a new FISH test. Fifty-eight EFTs were identified in 38 males and 20 females within an age-range of 1-65 years (median, 16), mostly in lower extremities (14) (24.1 %). Therapeutically, most patients underwent neoadjuvant chemotherapy with subsequent surgery. Histopathologically, diagnosis of EFTs was initially offered in 41/58 (70.6 %) tumors. On review, 59 % tumors showed diffuse pattern, while 41 % displayed rosettes. Immunohistochemically, tumor cells were mostly diffusely positive for CD99 (48/52) (92.3 %); FLI-1 (17/18) (94.4 %); variably for BCL2 (16/18) (88.8 %), synaptophysin (6/20) (35 %), S100-P (2/7) (28.5 %), CD56 (2/5) (40 %), NSE (2/5) (40 %), calponin (3/4) (75 %), EMA (5/24) (20.8 %) and CK (3/24) (12.5 %), the latter two mostly focally. Fifty five tumors were EWS-FLI1 positive, while a single tumor was EWS-ERG positive. Sensitivity for PCR was 61 %. EWSR1 rearrangement was detected by FISH in 12/13 Ewing sarcomas/PNETs. Sensitivity for EWSR1 test was 92.3 % and specificity was 100 %. Thirty-eight tumors, including 14 molecular confirmed EFTs and 21 other tumors were tested for EWSR1 rearrangement. Among 21 unrelated tumors, EWSR1 rearrangement was detected in few myoepithelial tumors, occasional desmoplastic small round cell tumor and an extraskeletal myxoid chondrosarcoma. Further, a tissue microarray with a separate set of 8 EFTs, confirmed at another laboratory was analysed for validation of EWSR1 rearrangement test. 23/28 (82.1 %) tissue cores of the tissue microarray, stained by FISH were interpretable, including EWSR1 rearrangement, detected in 20/28 tissue cores; not detected in 3 liver cores and uninterpretable in 5 (17.8 %) cores. Classical EFTs can be diagnosed with diffuse, membranous CD99 positivity, intranuclear FLI1 positivity and LCA negativity in malignant round cells. In unconventional cases, it is indispensable to reveal the concomitant fusion m-RNA by RT-PCR. In case of negative molecular results, it is necessary to prove EWSR1 rearrangement by FISH. These tests should be interpreted with clinicopathological correlation. Tissue microarrays for FISH are useful during validation of a new test, especially when sarcomas like EFTs show less genetic heterogeneity within tumor cells.
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PMID:Clinicopathological and molecular spectrum of ewing sarcomas/PNETs, including validation of EWSR1 rearrangement by conventional and array FISH technique in certain cases. 2429 81

The authors present a unique case of small cell variant of clear cell sarcoma of soft parts in a 42-year old woman. The tumor originally arose in the right flank of the soft tissues and ultimately developed both a local recurrence and multiple distant skin metastases two years and ten months thereafter. Nonspecific morphology of small blue round cell tumor was preserved at all microscopically verified sites and initially led to the spectrum of erroneous diagnoses such as an extraskeletal myxoid chondrosarcoma, Ewing sarcoma as well as malignant melanoma. The distinctive features of clear cell sarcoma such as fascicular nested growth pattern, spindling, clear cell change and/or eosinophilic cytoplasm were not disclosed even by extensive sampling. Immunohistochemically, the tumor expressed only S100protein and HMB45; all other markers (CD99, FLI1, cytokeratins, EMA) were completely negative. The molecular analysis carried out in one of the cutaneous metastases revealed translocation t(12;22) (EWSR1-ATF1) and ultimately led to the correct diagnosis of unusual Ewing-like clear cell sarcoma. Discussed is the implementation of molecular tests in routine diagnostics considering the existence of both histologically and biologically different tumors with an identical pathogenic molecular background.
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PMID:[Small cell type (Ewing-like) clear cell sarcoma of soft parts: a case report]. 2567 61

In the vulvar region, epithelioid sarcoma (ES) is the most frequent SMARCB1-deficient neoplasm, followed by myoepithelial carcinoma (MC). Previous studies have demonstrated that some SMARCB1-deficient vulvar neoplasms cannot be classified as either ES or MC. Herein, we report of a 42-year-old woman with a SMARCB1-deficient neoplasm with prominent myxoid stroma in the vulva. It contained both epithelioid and spindled tumor cells, both of which showed vimentin and EMA expression. Although other markers useful for the differential diagnosis among SMARCB1-deficient tumors were negative, this tumor displayed characteristic expression of ERG and FLI1. As there are no reliable data regarding expression of ERG and FLI1 in MC, which are demonstrated to be often expressed in ES, further classification of cases such as the one reported here requires reliable data regarding their expression status in MC.
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PMID:A SMARCB1-deficient vulvar neoplasm with prominent myxoid stroma: report of a case showing ERG and FLI1 expression. 2626 64

Neuroendocrine differentiation or aberrant expression of neuroendocrine markers is very uncommon in angiosarcomas (AS) and creates a challenging differential diagnosis with other superficial or soft tissue tumors. Herein, we report a new case of superficial AS presenting as a tumor lesion on the little finger of the right hand of a 52-year-old man. The tumor displayed CD56, chromogranin-A, and synaptophysin immunoreactivity. Tumor cells were positive for vascular markers (CD31, FLI1, ERG, D2-40, VE-cadherin, VEGR1,2, and 3), CD99, and EMA, but were negative for S100, CK (AE1/AE3), CK20, polyomavirus, and myogenic (desmin and myogenin) and melanocyte markers (melan-A and HMB45). Ki67 immunostains indicated high proliferative activity (>50%). The whole-body computed tomography did not reveal distant disease. The initial assessment considered several tumor subtypes as possible histological diagnoses, including Ewing sarcoma, Ewing-like sarcoma, Merkel cell carcinoma, and undifferentiated "small round cell sarcoma". Fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis was negative for EWSR1 translocation and molecular analysis failed to detect any EWSR1, CIC, SYT or BCOR rearrangement. As a follow-up investigation, we tested 17 cutaneous/superficial AS for neuroendocrine markers; however, only one of these showed focal CD56 and synaptophysin expression. In conclusion, the present findings indicate that neuroendocrine differentiation is a very infrequent feature in AS. We report an AS of the finger with an uncommon histological appearance and immunohistochemical profile: predominant round cell tumor proliferation and neuroendocrine differentiation. Pathologists should be aware of these potential histological and immunohistochemical pitfalls in AS.
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PMID:Unusual Neuroendocrine Differentiation in a Small Round Cell Angiosarcoma: A Potential Histologic Mimicker of Superficial Ewing Sarcoma. 2953 77

The molecular findings in Ewing sarcoma have greatly expanded in recent years. Furthermore, this is particularly true for the subset termed "Ewing-like" undifferentiated round cell sarcomas in which new translocations have been reported since the fourth edition of the WHO Classification of Tumours of Soft Tissue and Bone. Amid this expanding genetic landscape, we report a case of extraskeletal undifferentiated round cell "Ewing-like" sarcoma in a 27-year-old female. The patient presented with a large lung mass accompanied on staging imaging by deposits suspicious for metastatic disease in the humerus, calvarium, and lymph nodes of the neck and chest. Biopsy of the lung mass revealed a densely packed monotonous proliferation of round, uniform neoplastic cells with scant cytoplasm. By immunohistochemistry, the tumor cells were diffusely positive for CD99, synaptophysin, TLE1, EMA, and MUC4 and negative for FLI1, PAX7, AE1/3, S100, SOX10, WT1, p63, desmin, and HMB45. Fluorescence in situ hybridization demonstrated rearrangement of the EWSR1 gene. Next-generation sequencing based assay revealed an EWSR1-CREB3L1 fusion. Taken together, the histomorphologic and molecular findings were considered consistent with an undifferentiated round cell sarcoma with an EWSR1-CREB3L1 fusion. Although described in entities such as sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma, low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma, and small cell osteosarcoma, this has not been previously described in undifferentiated round cell ("Ewing-like") sarcoma. This finding adds to the growing list of undifferentiated round cell sarcomas with Ewing-like morphologic phenotype-associated fusion genes and may contribute to further defining and characterizing the different subset of tumors in the Ewing family of tumors.
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PMID:An EWSR1-CREB3L1 Fusion Gene in Extraskeletal Undifferentiated Round Cell Sarcoma Expands the Spectrum of Genetic Landscape in the "Ewing-Like" Undifferentiated Round Cell Sarcomas. 3250 86