PRRX1 -rearranged Fibroblastic Tumors : A Clinicopathologic and Molecular Study of 18 Cases Including a Novel PRRX1::EP300 Fusion

  • Carina A. Dehner
  • , Jorge Torres-Mora
  • , Judith Jebastin Thangaiah
  • , Andre Oliveira
  • , Michael Michal
  • , Faizan Malik
  • , Nasir Ud Din
  • , Usman Hassan
  • , Hina Maqbool
  • , Farres Obeidin
  • , Mara Caragea
  • , Cheng Han Lee
  • , Christian Schubart
  • , Abbas Agaimy
  • , Bo Grundtmann
  • , Linea Melchior
  • , Maj Lis Talman
  • , John Gross
  • , Alison L. Cheah
  • , Khin Thway
  • Cyril Fisher, Cristina R. Antonescu, Konstantinos Linos

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

With the first series of PRRX1 -rearranged tumors published in 2019, the spectrum of these so-called fibroblastic tumors has been expanded. Since then, several smaller case series have been published; however, our understanding of them continues to be quite limited given their rarity. We herein studied 18 additional cases, the largest series to date. Eighteen tumors present in 9 male, 8 female, and 1 nonbinary patient with a median age of 35 years (range: 11 to 70 y) and involved the neck (5), the chest region (4), thigh (3), back (1), shoulder (1), forehead (1), lower leg (1), axilla (1), and the parapharyngeal region (1). Clinical follow-up (9/18 tumors; 50%; median: 10 mo; range: 4 to 40 mo) showed consistent indolent behavior without local recurrences or distant metastases. On morphology, these tumors were characterized by well-circumscription and distinctive peripheral crescent-shaped vessels. They were composed of uniform spindle and round cells growing in short fascicles within often densely hyalinized collagen lacking significant mitotic activity, necrosis, or cytologic atypia. Immunohistochemically, about half of the tested tumors expressed focal to rarely diffuse S100 with occasional co-expression of SOX10. Interestingly, almost half of the tested cases also showed complete loss of RB expression. All but 1 tumor harbored a PRRX1::NCOA1 fusion, while 1 case harbored a novel PRRX1::EP300 fusion. We herein provide additional data on these exceptionally uncommon tumors, expand their molecular spectrum, and compare them to their close morphologic mimics to aid in accurate diagnosis and avoid confusion with potentially more aggressive neoplasms.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)31-40
Number of pages10
JournalAmerican Journal of Surgical Pathology
Volume50
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2026

Keywords

  • fibroblastic tumor

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