Investigator

Cristina R. Antonescu

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

CRACristina R. Anton…
Papers(4)
Expanding the molecul…A novel <i>WWTR1::AFF…Targeted RNA expressi…Developing Novel Geno…
Collaborators(10)
Josephine K. DermawanBrendan C DicksonSarah ChiangSamuel SingerMartee L. HensleyStephen YipSujana MovvaWilliam D. TapAbbas AgaimyAlbrecht Stenzinger
Institutions(5)
Memorial Sloan Ketter…University Of TorontoUniversity Of British…Universitätsklinikum …University Hospital H…

Papers

Expanding the molecular spectrum of gene fusions in endometrial stromal sarcoma: Novel subunits of the chromatin remodeling complexes PRC2 and NuA4/TIP60 as alternative fusion partners

AbstractEndometrial stromal sarcomas (ESS) are morphologically and molecularly heterogeneous. We report novel gene fusions (EPC1::EED, EPC1::EZH2, ING3::PHF1) identified by targeted RNA sequencing in five cases. The ING3::PHF1‐fusion positive ESS presented in a 58‐year‐old female as extrauterine mesocolonic, ovarian masses, and displayed large, monomorphic ovoid‐to‐epithelioid cells arranged in solid sheets. The patient remained alive with disease 13 months after surgery. The three ESS with EPC1::EED occurred in the uterine corpus in patients with a median age of 58 years (range 27–62 years). One tumor showed a uniform epithelioid nested morphology, while the other two were composed of monomorphic spindle cells in fascicles with elevated mitotic figures, focal tumor cell necrosis, and lymphovascular invasion. At a median follow‐up of 20 months, two patients developed local recurrence, including one with concomitant distant metastasis, while one patient remained free of disease. All three patients were alive at the last follow‐up. The EPC1::EZH2‐fusion positive ESS presented in a 52‐year‐old female in the uterus, and displayed uniform spindled cells arranged in short fascicles, with focally elevated mitotic activity but without necrosis. The patient remained free of disease 3 months after surgery. All cases were diffusely positive for CD10; four diffusely express estrogen and progesterone receptors. Our study expands the molecular spectrum of EPC1 and PHF1‐related gene fusions in ESS to include additional novel subunits of the PRC2 and/or NuA4/TIP60 complexes. These cases displayed a monomorphic epithelioid or spindled phenotype, spanning low‐grade and high‐grade cytomorphology, all expressing CD10 and commonly ER and PR, and are prone to local and/or distant spread.

A novel WWTR1::AFF2 fusion in an intra‐abdominal soft tissue sarcoma with associated endometriosis

AbstractApplication of molecular testing in clinical practice has led to significant advances in the classification of soft tissue sarcomas. Despite remarkable progress, there are still challenging cases that remain unclassified. In this study, we present an unusual spindle cell sarcoma arising in the abdominal cavity of a 37‐year‐old female. An extensive panel of immunostains was nonspecific for a line of differentiation and the tumor was subjected to targeted RNA sequencing for further classification. The findings showed a novel WWTR1::AFF2 fusion, which was further confirmed by break‐apart FISH analysis for WWTR1 gene rearrangement. The tumor was attached to the wall of sigmoid colon and showed a highly cellular proliferation of plump spindle to epithelioid cells arranged in intersecting fascicles. Areas of extensive endometriosis were identified adjacent to the tumor. The immunoprofile was significant for reactivity with desmin, calponin, WT‐1, ER, and PR, while negative for CD10, SMA, caldesmon, pan‐keratin, ALK, CD117, and S100. The patient is alive and well after 11 months of follow‐up. The exact histogenesis of this sarcoma remains unclear, however, the presence of adjacent endometriosis and coexpression of WT1/ER/PR raises the possibility of an unusual endometrioid stromal sarcoma, occurring outside the GYN tract. Additional cases are needed to establish the recurrent potential of this fusion event and to better define its pathogenesis and clinical behavior.

Targeted RNA expression profiling identifies high-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma as a clinically relevant molecular subtype of uterine sarcoma

High-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma (HGESS) may harbor YWHAE-NUTM2A/B fusion, ZC3H7B-BCOR fusion, and BCOR internal tandem duplication (ITD). NTRK3 upregulation and pan-Trk expression were reported in soft tissue lesions that share similar morphology and genetic abnormalities. To confirm these findings in HGESS, differential expression analysis was performed at gene level comparing 11 HGESS with 48 other uterine sarcomas, including 9 low-grade endometrial stromal sarcomas, 23 undifferentiated uterine sarcomas, and 16 leiomyosarcomas, using targeted RNA sequencing data. Pan-Trk immunohistochemistry was performed on 35 HGESS, including 10 tumors with RNA expression data, with genotypes previously confirmed by targeted RNA sequencing, fluorescence in situ hybridization, and/or genomic PCR. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering of the top 25% of differentially expressed probes identified three molecular groups: (1) high NTRK3, FGFR3, RET, BCOR, GLI1, and PTCH1 and low ESR1 expression; (2) low NTRK3, FGFR3, RET, BCOR, GLI1, and PTCH1 and high ESR1 expression; and (3) low NTRK3, FGFR3, RET, BCOR, GLI1, PTCH1, and ESR1 expression. Among HGESS, 64% of tumors clustered in group 1, while 27% clustered in group 2. Cytoplasmic and/or nuclear pan-Trk staining of variable extent and intensity was seen in 91% of HGESS regardless of cyclin D1 and/or BCOR positivity. ER and PR expression was seen in 44% of HGESS despite ESR1 downregulation. Two patients with ER and PR positive but ESR1 downregulated stage I HGESS were treated with endocrine therapy, and both recurred at 12 and 36 months after primary resection. By RNA expression, HGESS appear homogenous and distinct from other uterine sarcomas by activation of kinases, including NTRK3, and sonic hedgehog pathway genes along with downregulation of ESR1. Most HGESS demonstrate pan-Trk staining which may serve as a diagnostic biomarker. ESR1 downregulation is seen in some HGESS that express ER and PR which raises implications in the utility of endocrine therapy in these patients.

Developing Novel Genomic Risk Stratification Models in Soft Tissue and Uterine Leiomyosarcoma

Abstract Purpose: Leiomyosarcomas (LMS) are clinically and molecularly heterogeneous tumors. Despite recent large-scale genomic studies, current LMS risk stratification is not informed by molecular alterations. We propose a clinically applicable genomic risk stratification model. Experimental Design: We performed comprehensive genomic profiling in a cohort of 195 soft tissue LMS (STLMS), 151 primary at presentation, and a control group of 238 uterine LMS (ULMS), 177 primary at presentation, with at least 1-year follow-up. Results: In STLMS, French Federation of Cancer Centers (FNCLCC) grade but not tumor size predicted progression-free survival (PFS) or disease-specific survival (DSS). In contrast, in ULMS, tumor size, mitotic rate, and necrosis were associated with inferior PFS and DSS. In STLMS, a 3-tier genomic risk stratification performed well for DSS: high risk: co-occurrence of RB1 mutation and chr12q deletion (del12q)/ATRX mutation; intermediate risk: presence of RB1 mutation, ATRX mutation, or del12q; low risk: lack of any of these three alterations. The ability of RB1 and ATRX alterations to stratify STLMS was validated in an external AACR GENIE cohort. In ULMS, a 3-tier genomic risk stratification was significant for both PFS and DSS: high risk: concurrent TP53 mutation and chr20q amplification/ATRX mutations; intermediate risk: presence of TP53 mutation, ATRX mutation, or amp20q; low risk: lack of any of these three alterations. Longitudinal sequencing showed that most molecular alterations were early clonal events that persisted during disease progression. Conclusions: Compared with traditional clinicopathologic models, genomic risk stratification demonstrates superior prediction of clinical outcome in STLMS and is comparable in ULMS.

1Works
4Papers
13Collaborators