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Assessment of The Utility of The Sarcoma DNA Methylation Classifier In Surgical Pathology

Markku Miettinen, Zied Abdullaev, Rust Turakulov, Martha Quezado, Alejandro Contreras, Christian A. Curcio, Janusz Ryś, Małgorzata Chłopek, Jerzy Lasota, Kenneth Aldape

2023The American Journal of Surgical Pathology35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Diagnostic classification of soft tissue tumors is based on histology, immunohistochemistry, genetic findings, and radiologic and clinical correlations. Recently, a sarcoma DNA methylation classifier was developed, covering 62 soft tissue and bone tumor entities. The classifier is based on large-scale analysis of methylation sites across the genome. It includes DNA copy number analysis and determines O 6 methylguanine DNA methyl-transferase methylation status. In this study, we evaluated 619 well-studied soft tissue and bone tumors with the sarcoma classifier. Problem cases and typical examples of different entities were included. The classifier had high sensitivity and specificity for fusion sarcomas: Ewing, synovial, CIC -rearranged, and BCOR -rearranged. It also performed well for leiomyosarcoma, malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNST), and malignant vascular tumors. There was low sensitivity for diagnoses of desmoid fibromatosis, neurofibroma, and schwannoma. Low specificity of matches was observed for angiomatoid fibrous histiocytoma, inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor, Langerhans histiocytosis, schwannoma, undifferentiated sarcoma, and well-differentiated/dedifferentiated liposarcoma. Diagnosis of lipomatous tumors was greatly assisted by the detection of MDM2 amplification and RB1 loss in the copy plot. The classifier helped to establish diagnoses for KIT-negative gastrointestinal stromal tumors, MPNSTs with unusual immunophenotypes, and undifferentiated melanomas. O 6 methylguanine DNA methyl-transferase methylation was infrequent and most common in melanomas (35%), MPNSTs (11%), and undifferentiated sarcomas (11%). The Sarcoma Methylation Classifier will likely evolve with the addition of new entities and refinement of the present methylation classes. The classifier may also help to define new entities and give new insight into the interrelationships of sarcomas.

Topics & Concepts

PathologyMalignant peripheral nerve sheath tumorSarcomaSynovial sarcomaSoft tissue sarcomaLeiomyosarcomaDNA methylationBiologyMedicineImmunohistochemistryGeneBiochemistryGene expressionSarcoma Diagnosis and TreatmentSoft tissue tumor case studiesTumors and Oncological Cases
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