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Soft tissue angiofibroma : Clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical and molecular analysis of 14 cases

Bekers, Elise M. ; Groenen, Patricia J.T.A. ; Verdijk, Marian A.J. ; Raaijmakers-van Geloof, Winny L. ; Roepman, Paul ; Vink, Robert ; Gilhuijs, Nathalie D.B. ; van Gorp, Joost M. ; Bovée, Judith V M G and Creytens, David H. , et al. (2017) In Genes Chromosomes and Cancer 56(10). p.750-757
Abstract

Soft tissue angiofibroma is rare and has characteristic histomorphological and genetic features. For diagnostic purposes, there are no specific antibodies available. Fourteen lesions (6 females, 8 males; age range 7-67 years) of the lower extremities (12) and trunk (2) were investigated by immunohistochemistry, including for the first time NCOA2. NCOA2 was also tested in a control group of other spindle cell lesions. The known fusion-genes (AHRR-NCOA2 and GTF2I-NCOA2) were examined using RT-PCR in order to evaluate their diagnostic value. Cases in which no fusion gene was detected were additionally analysed by RNA sequencing. All cases tested showed nuclear expression of NCOA2. However, this was not specific since other spindle cell... (More)

Soft tissue angiofibroma is rare and has characteristic histomorphological and genetic features. For diagnostic purposes, there are no specific antibodies available. Fourteen lesions (6 females, 8 males; age range 7-67 years) of the lower extremities (12) and trunk (2) were investigated by immunohistochemistry, including for the first time NCOA2. NCOA2 was also tested in a control group of other spindle cell lesions. The known fusion-genes (AHRR-NCOA2 and GTF2I-NCOA2) were examined using RT-PCR in order to evaluate their diagnostic value. Cases in which no fusion gene was detected were additionally analysed by RNA sequencing. All cases tested showed nuclear expression of NCOA2. However, this was not specific since other spindle cell neoplasms also expressed this marker in a high percentage of cases. Other variably positive markers were EMA, SMA, desmin and CD34. STAT6 was negative in the cases tested. By RT-PCR for the most frequently observed fusions, an AHRR-NCOA2 fusion transcript was found in 9/14 cases. GTF2I-NCOA2 was not detected in the remaining cases (n = 3). RNA sequencing revealed three additional positive cases; two harbored a AHRR-NCOA2 fusion and one case a novel GAB1-ABL1 fusion. Two cases failed molecular analysis due to poor RNA quality. In conclusion, the AHRR-NCOA2 fusion is a frequent finding in soft tissue angiofibroma, while GTF2I-NCOA2 seems to be a rare genetic event. For the first time, we report a GAB1-ABL1 fusion in a soft tissue angiofibroma of a child. Nuclear expression of NCOA2 is not discriminating when compared with other spindle cell neoplasms.

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publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Genes Chromosomes and Cancer
volume
56
issue
10
pages
8 pages
publisher
John Wiley & Sons Inc.
external identifiers
  • scopus:85026324325
  • pmid:28639284
  • wos:000409326600004
ISSN
1045-2257
DOI
10.1002/gcc.22478
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
68efba13-152b-422c-b7f0-d3cdb9374586
date added to LUP
2017-09-01 10:12:32
date last changed
2024-04-14 16:50:29
@article{68efba13-152b-422c-b7f0-d3cdb9374586,
  abstract     = {{<p>Soft tissue angiofibroma is rare and has characteristic histomorphological and genetic features. For diagnostic purposes, there are no specific antibodies available. Fourteen lesions (6 females, 8 males; age range 7-67 years) of the lower extremities (12) and trunk (2) were investigated by immunohistochemistry, including for the first time NCOA2. NCOA2 was also tested in a control group of other spindle cell lesions. The known fusion-genes (AHRR-NCOA2 and GTF2I-NCOA2) were examined using RT-PCR in order to evaluate their diagnostic value. Cases in which no fusion gene was detected were additionally analysed by RNA sequencing. All cases tested showed nuclear expression of NCOA2. However, this was not specific since other spindle cell neoplasms also expressed this marker in a high percentage of cases. Other variably positive markers were EMA, SMA, desmin and CD34. STAT6 was negative in the cases tested. By RT-PCR for the most frequently observed fusions, an AHRR-NCOA2 fusion transcript was found in 9/14 cases. GTF2I-NCOA2 was not detected in the remaining cases (n = 3). RNA sequencing revealed three additional positive cases; two harbored a AHRR-NCOA2 fusion and one case a novel GAB1-ABL1 fusion. Two cases failed molecular analysis due to poor RNA quality. In conclusion, the AHRR-NCOA2 fusion is a frequent finding in soft tissue angiofibroma, while GTF2I-NCOA2 seems to be a rare genetic event. For the first time, we report a GAB1-ABL1 fusion in a soft tissue angiofibroma of a child. Nuclear expression of NCOA2 is not discriminating when compared with other spindle cell neoplasms.</p>}},
  author       = {{Bekers, Elise M. and Groenen, Patricia J.T.A. and Verdijk, Marian A.J. and Raaijmakers-van Geloof, Winny L. and Roepman, Paul and Vink, Robert and Gilhuijs, Nathalie D.B. and van Gorp, Joost M. and Bovée, Judith V M G and Creytens, David H. and Flanagan, Adrienne M. and Suurmeijer, Albert J. H. and Mentzel, Thomas and Arbajian, Elsa and Flucke, Uta}},
  issn         = {{1045-2257}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{10}},
  number       = {{10}},
  pages        = {{750--757}},
  publisher    = {{John Wiley & Sons Inc.}},
  series       = {{Genes Chromosomes and Cancer}},
  title        = {{Soft tissue angiofibroma : Clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical and molecular analysis of 14 cases}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/gcc.22478}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/gcc.22478}},
  volume       = {{56}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}