4.1 Article

Pediatric undifferentiated sarcoma of the soft tissues: A clinicopathologic study

Journal

PEDIATRIC AND DEVELOPMENTAL PATHOLOGY
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages 132-142

Publisher

ALLIANCE COMMUNICATIONS GROUP DIVISION ALLEN PRESS
DOI: 10.2350/08-05-0098.1

Keywords

undifferentiated sarcoma; soft tissue; pediatric; immunohistochemistry; molecular genetics; therapy; tissue microarray

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Pediatric undifferentiated soft tissue sarcomas represent a major challenge for pathologists and clinicians. The goal of this study was to identify cases that warranted this diagnosis by current standards of analysis and then determine if there are clinicopathological commonalities that may be useful for diagnosis, management, and prognosis. Eighteen potential patients were identified using the institutional pathology database. Three cases were reclassified as specific sarcomas, and 2 cases had insufficient material for molecular analysis, leaving 13 cases for pathological review and 12 patients for radiological and clinical review. There were 7 males and 6 females. The median age at diagnosis was 11 years (1 month to 16 years). Tumors commonly involved the trunk (7 of 13; 54%) and ranged in size from 1.7 to 14.5 cm (mean, 6.7 cm). Eleven patients received ifosfamide/etoposide chemotherapy and 4 received irradiation. Five-year event-free and overall survival (EFS and OS) rates were 54% and 74%, respectively. The predominant histological pattern was round to plump spindled cells forming sheets (9 of 13; 69%) and severe atypia was associated with decreased survival (P = 0.048). Immunohistochemistry showed positivity for vimentin (92%), CD117 (92%), and vascular endothelial growth factor (69%), and 8% to 23% showed focal positivity for epithelial, neural, or myogenic markers. Tumors were uniformly negative for translocations associated with pediatric sarcomas. The presence of certain common morphological and immunohistochemical features in the absence of specific molecular genetic abnormalities allows for a diagnosis of pediatric undifferentiated soft tissue sarcoma; however, whether this group of neoplasms forms a unique category of tumors or a common precursor pathway for a number of different sarcomas awaits further study.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.1
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available