Recurrent KAT6B/A::KANSL1 Fusions Characterize a Potentially Aggressive Uterine Sarcoma Morphologically Overlapping With Low-grade Endometrial Stromal Sarcoma

With the widespread application of next-generation sequencing, the genetic landscape of uterine mesenchymal neoplasms has been evolving rapidly to include several recently identified fusion genes. Although chromosomal rearrangements involving the 10q22 and 17q21.31 loci have been reported in occasional uterine leiomyomas decades ago, the corresponding KAT6B::KANSL1 fusion has been only recently identified in 2 uterine tumors diagnosed as leiomyoma and leiomyosarcoma. We herein describe 13 uterine stromal neoplasms carrying a KAT6B::KANSL1 (n=11) and KAT6A::KANSL1 (n=2) fusion. Patient ages ranged from 33 to 81 years (median, 49 y). Tumor size was 2.6 to 23.5 cm (median, 8.2 cm). Nine tumors were myometrium-centered, and 3 had an intracavitary component. Original diagnoses were mostly low-grade endometrial stromal sarcoma (LG-ESS; 10 cases) with atypical features (limited CD10 expression, sex cord-like features, pericytic vasculature, and frequent myxoid changes). Treatment was hysterectomy±bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy (10), myomectomy (1), and curettage (2). Five patients were disease-free at 6 to 34 months, 3 (27%) died of disease at 2 to 47 months, and 3 were alive with disease at 2, 17, and 17 years. Histologically, most tumors showed variable overlap with LG-ESS, but they were generally well-circumscribed lacking the extensive permeative and angioinvasive growth typical of LG-ESS. They were composed of monotonous medium-sized oval and spindle cells arranged into...
Source: The American Journal of Surgical Pathology - Category: Pathology Tags: Original Articles Source Type: research