AI Article Synopsis

  • Retiform hemangioendotheliomas (RHE) and composite hemangioendotheliomas (CHE) are types of aggressive vascular tumors, characterized by specific cellular structures and possibly linked by genetic abnormalities involving the YAP1 and MAML2 genes.* -
  • In a study of 24 cases, genetic testing revealed that a significant portion of RHE and CHE tumors had YAP1-MAML2 gene fusions, indicating a shared genetic basis between these tumors.* -
  • A unique case of neuroendocrine CHE showed a different genetic fusion (PTBP1-MAML2) and presented with more aggressive clinical behavior, suggesting it may be a distinct entity separate from traditional RHE and CHE.*

Article Abstract

Retiform and composite hemangioendotheliomas (CHEs) are both locally aggressive, rarely metastasizing vascular neoplasms characterized by arborizing vascular channels lined by endothelial cells with a hobnail morphology. CHE displays additional cytologic and architectural components, including often vacuolated epithelioid cells, solid areas, or features reminiscent of well-differentiated angiosarcoma. Triggered by an index case of a soft tissue retiform hemangioendothelioma (RHE) which revealed a YAP1-MAML2 gene fusion by targeted RNA sequencing, we sought to investigate additional cases in this morphologic spectrum for this genetic abnormality. A total of 24 cases, 13 RHE and 11 CHE involving skin and soft tissue were tested by fluorescence in situ hybridization using custom BAC probes for rearrangements involving these genes. An additional visceral CHE with neuroendocrine differentiation was tested by targeted RNA sequencing. Among the soft tissue cohort, 5/13 (38%) RHE and 3/11 (27%) CHE showed YAP1 gene rearrangements, with 5 cases showing a YAP1-MAML2 fusion, including all 3 CHE. The single neuroendocrine CHE showed the presence of a PTBP1-MAML2 fusion. All YAP1-positive CHE lesions occurred in female children at acral sites, compared with fusion-negative cases which occurred in adults, with a wide anatomic distribution. YAP1-positive RHE occurred preferentially in males and lower limb, compared with negative cases. These results suggest that RHE and CHE represent a morphologic continuum, sharing abnormalities in YAP1 and MAML2 genes. In contrast, the neuroendocrine CHE occurring in a 37-year-old male harbored a distinct PTBP1-MAML2 fusion and showed aggressive clinical behavior (pancreatic mass with multiple liver and lung metastases). These preliminary findings raise the possibility that neuroendocrine CHE may be genetically distinct from the conventional RHE/CHE spectrum. Further studies are needed to investigate the pathogenetic relationship of fusion-negative cases with this subset and, less likely, with other members of the HE family of tumors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7773139PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PAS.0000000000001575DOI Listing

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