AI Article Synopsis

  • Sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma (SEF) is an extremely rare primary bone tumor, with rare instances showing similarities to low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma (LGFMS).
  • The study describes three confirmed cases in patients aged 16, 26, and 47, located in the femoral head, clavicle, and temporal bone, and emphasizes the diagnostic challenges due to their variable characteristics.
  • All tumors showed histological features of both SEF and LGFMS, confirmed by MUC4 positivity and EWSR1 gene rearrangements through advanced genetic testing.

Article Abstract

Sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma (SEF) occurring as a primary bone tumor is exceptionally uncommon. Even more rare are cases of SEF that show morphologic overlap with low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma (LGFMS). Such hybrid lesions arising within the bone have only rarely been reported in the literature. Due to their variegated histomorphology and non-specific radiologic features, these tumors may pose diagnostic difficulties. Herein we describe three molecularly confirmed primary bone cases of sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma that demonstrated prominent areas showing the features of LGFMS and with areas resembling so-called hyalinizing spindle cell tumor with giant rosettes (HSCTGR). Two patients were female and one was male aged 26, 47, and 16, respectively. The tumors occurred in the femoral head, clavicle, and temporal bone. Imaging studies demonstrated relatively well-circumscribed radiolucent bone lesions with enhancement on MRI. Cortical breakthrough and soft tissue extension were present in one case. Histologically the tumors all demonstrated hyalinized areas with SEF-like morphology as well as spindled and myxoid areas with LGFMS-like morphology. Two cases demonstrated focal areas with rosette-like architecture as seen in HSCTGR. The tumors were all positive for MUC4 by immunohistochemistry and cytogenetics, fluorescence in-situ hybridization, and next-generation sequencing studies identified EWSR1 gene rearrangements confirming the diagnosis in all three cases.Hybrid SEF is exceedingly rare as a primary bone tumor and can be difficult to distinguish from other low-grade spindled and epithelioid lesions of bone. MUC4 positivity and identification of underlying EWSR1 gene rearrangements help support this diagnosis and exclude other tumor types.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00256-023-04412-6DOI Listing

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