4.6 Article

Inflammatory Rhabdomyoblastic Tumor: Clinicopathologic and Molecular Analysis of 13 Cases

Journal

MODERN PATHOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.modpat.2023.100359

Keywords

inflammatory leiomyosarcoma; inflammatory rhabdomyoblastic; tumor; NF1; rhabdomyosarcoma; TP53

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Inflammatory rhabdomyoblastic tumors (IRMTs) are newly recognized skeletal muscle tumors with uncertain malignant potential. This study investigated 13 IRMTs using clinicopathologic, genetic, and epigenetic methods. The results showed specific histologic features and genetic mutations in these tumors, and most of them exhibited benign behavior.
Inflammatory rhabdomyoblastic tumors (IRMTs) are newly recognized skeletal muscle tumors with uncertain malignant potential. We investigated 13 IRMTs using clinicopathologic, genetic, and epigenetic methods. The cohort included 7 men and 6 women, aged 23 to 80 years (median, 50 years), of whom 2 had neurofibromatosis type 1. Most tumors occurred in the deep soft tissues of the lower limbs, head/neck, trunk wall, and retroperitoneum/pelvis. Two tumors involved the hypopharyngeal submucosa as polypoid masses. Eight tumors showed conventional histology of predominantly spindled cells with nuclear atypia, low mitotic activity, and massive inflammatory infiltrates. Three tumors showed atypical histology, including uniform epithelioid or plump cells and mitotically active histiocytes. The remaining 2 tumors demonstrated malignant progression to rhabdomyosarcoma; one had additional IRMT histology and the other was a pure sarcoma. All 11 IRMTs without malignant progression exhibited indolent behavior at a median follow-up of 43 months. One of the 2 patients with IRMTs with malignant progression died of lung metastases. All IRMTs were positive for desmin and PAX7, whereas myogenin and MyoD1 were expressed in a subset of cases. Targeted next-generation sequencing identified pathogenic mutations in NF1 (5/8) and TP53 (4/8). All TP53 mutations co-occurred with NF1 mutations. TP53 variant allele frequency was much lower than that of NF1 in 2 cases. These tumors showed geographic (subclonal) strong p53 immunoreactivity, suggesting the secondary emergence of a TP53-mutant clone. DNA methylationebased copy number analysis conducted in 11 tumors revealed characteristic flat patterns with relative gains, including chromosomes 5, 18, 20, 21, and/or 22 in most cases. Widespread

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