Paediatric tumours Flashcards
1yr M, arm lesion
Dx:
Key features:
Presentation:
Syndromic associations:
Mutation:
IHC:
Fibrous haemartoma of infancy.
Triphasic organoid pattern: Mature adipose tissue, myxoid nodules containing primitive mesenchymal cells with rounded to stellate nuclei, fascicles of bland fibroblasts/myofibroblastic cells. Mitosis/necrosis infrequent/absent respectively. Interspersed inflammaotry cells.
bundles of bland fibroblastic/myofibroblastic cells, nodules of primitive mesenchyme, and mature adipose tissue.
Painless, solitary s/c mass. Multiple tumours in same pt can be encountered. Dx < 2 yrs, male predominance.
Tuberous sclerosis and William syndrome.
Recurrent EGFR exon 20 insertion/duplication.
IHC: SMA(+) fibroblastic areas/primitve mesenchyme; S100 adipocytic component; CD34(+) in primitive mesenchyme. EGFR expression desireable.
Below: bundles of fibroblastic spindle cells, mature adipose tissue, and nodules of primitive mesenchyme.
Dx:
Clin presentation:
Genetic mutation:
Histo:
Px:
Lipoblastoma (localised) vs lipoblastomatosis (diffuse).
Trunk/extremities. 75–90% of cases occur before the age of 3 years).
Rearrangement of PLAG1
lobulated tumour comprising sheets of adipocytes showing a spectrum of maturation, separated by fibrovascular septa. Myxoid areas display a plexiform vascular pattern with primitive mesenchymal cells. Zonal pattern of maturation, with more immature myxoid cells at the periphery (adjacent to fibrous septa) and mature adipocytes in the centre of the lobule.
IHC: S100, CD34, CD56 in lipoblasts. PLAG1 nuclear immunohistochemical staining can be useful, especially in less differentiated tumours, but its concordance with molecular studies is < 60% and sensitivity is about 50%
Tendency to recurrence if incompletely excised.
Image: The tumour shows predominant lipoblasts, with evidence of a spectrum of maturation.
2M leg mass
Dx?
Key features demonstrated by this image.
DDX?
Px:
Lipoblastoma.
A spectrum of adipocyte maturity, myxoid matrix, and fibrovascular septa constitute this classic lipoblastoma.
DDx:
Lipofibromatosis (no lipoblasts)
FHI: ((no lipoblasts; EGFR(+) by IHC)
Myxoid liposarcoma (rare in childre, usu 3-6th decage)
Primitive myxoid mesenchymal tumour of infancy (predominant round cell component, curvilinear plexiform vascular pattern, )
Complete excison is curative.
Below image: A spectrum of adipocyte maturity, myxoid matrix, and fibrovascular septa constitute this classic lipoblastoma.
4M ankle lesion
Dx:
Presentation:
Key features:
DDx:
Px:
Lipofibromatosis
Distinctive admixture of mature fat, fascicles of bland spindled cells, and lipoblast-like cells.
typically presents as a slowly growing s/c mass.
Male predilection, from birth to 14 yrs.
Histo: fascicles of mature fibrous tissue with bland, uniform, elongated nuclei and eosinophilic cytoplasm traversing mature adipose tissue. In newborn patients, the fat lobules may have an immature appearance with a myxoid matrix. Small collections of univacuolated cells may be present in the fibroblastic component. LPF entraps skeletal muscle and subcutaneous structures. Mitoses are rare and necrosis is absent.
IHC: fibroblasts show variable expression of CD34 and SMA, and the fat is S100-positive.
DDx:
Fibromatosis
FHI (has immature mesenchymal component)
Fibrolipoma: fibrous component is perilobular, no intersecting fascicles
Lipoblastoma (lobular architecture; myxoid areas, immature lipoblasts, PLAG1 rearrang)
Lipofibromatosis-like neural toumours: cyto atypia, CD34(+), S100(+), NTRK1 gene fusion
Calcifying aponeurotic fibroma, infantile fibrosarcoma (if early and no prominent calcs can mimic LPF; recurrent FN1::EGF gene fusion)
High rate of recurrence if incompletely excised. No metastatic potential.
Image: Mature adipose tissue is traversed by cellular fascicles of spindle cells with uniform fibroblasts.
In other image, entrapped skeletal m.
5M pelvic abscess
Dx?
CD99(-), desmin(+), MyoD1(+), Myogenin (patchy +)
Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma.
Primitive mesencyhmal cells in various stages of myogenesis.
Mha have prominent spindel cell morphology.
Heterologous cartilage may be seen, esp in tumours a/w DICER1 syndrome.
Embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma
Arises most commonly in which sites?
Head and neck region, orbit and genitourinary.
alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma
Arises most commonly in which sites?
extremities
rhabdomyosarcoma
subtypes
Embryonal
Alveolar
Pleomorphic
Spindle cell sclerosing
Anaplastic + botryoid (?only embryonal?)
alveolar Rhabdomyosarcoma
Genetic mutations
ARMS is characterized by a t(2;13)(q36;q14) translocation in 70–80% of cases, or a t(1;13)(p36;q14) translocation in 20–25% of cases { 8098985 ; 8187070 ; 8275086 ; 22447499 ; 28521080 }. These translocations juxtapose PAX3 (2q36.1) or PAX7 (1p36.13) with FOXO1 (13q14.11). PAX7::FOXO1 fusions are associated with amplification of the PAX7 locus
6M desmin(+), myogenin(+), INI1(+), CD99/NKX2.2/CD45/PHOX2B/WT1 (-)
Dx?
Botryoid rhabdomyosarcoma.
Low-power examination of a mucosal-based botryoid embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma shows hypocellular polypoid masses with tumour condensation beneath the epithelial lining (cambium layer).
spindle cell sclerosing rhabdomyosarcoma
mutation?
SCSRMS may harbour MYOD1 p.L122R mutations or VGLL2::NCOA2 rearrangements
rhabdomyosarcoma subtypes
Essential and desireable dx features as per the WHO
Essential: for ERMS: primitive spindle to round cell morphology with differentiating rhabdomyoblasts; heterogeneous nuclear staining for myogenin; for ARMS: monomorphic round cells; homogeneous strong nuclear staining for myogenin; presence of PAX3, PAX7, or FOXO1 rearrangement; for SCSRMS: purely spindled morphology with intersecting fascicles or admixed sclerosing patterns with round cells and abundant collagenous/hyalinized matrix.
Desirable (in selected cases): MYOD1 mutations or VGLL2::NCOA2 gene rearrangements in SCSRMS; diffuse nuclear staining for MYOD1 in SCSRMS.
rhabdomyosarcoma
Which IHC can be used to distinguish ERMS vs ARMS vs SCSRMS? Describe the pattern of staining.
ARMS with FOXO1 rearrangements shows strong diffuse nuclear staining for myogenin, whereas ERMS shows variable myogenin expression (10–80% of tumour nuclei) { 23765537 }. SCSRMS may have little to absent desmin or myogenin expression but show strong and diffuse nuclear staining for MYOD1
Px rhabdomyosarcoma
Prognosis?
rhabdomyosarcoma, subtypes
Morphology, genetic mutations and px
17F, lumbar paraspinal tumour
AE1/AE3/desmin/synapto (-); INI retained; S100 patchy +; CD99 strong membraneous +; NKX2.2+, ERG+
Dx?
Genetic mutions?
Ewing sarcoma is a small round cell sarcoma with gene fusions involving a FET-family gene (usually EWSR1) and a member of the ETS family of transcription factors.
Gene fusion involving a FET gene (FUS, EWSR1, or TAF15) and an ETS gene. The most common gene fusion is EWSR1::FLI1, resulting from a t(11;22)(q24;q12) translocation, present in about 85% of cases. The second most common gene fusion is EWSR1::ERG, resulting from a t(21;22)(q22;q12) translocation, seen in about 10% of Ewing sarcomas