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Published online before print August 9, 2007
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Copyright © 2007 American Society for Investigative Pathology
Journal of Molecular Diagnostics, doi:10.2353/jmoldx.2007.070053


Accepted for publication May 21, 2007.


Article

Undifferentiated Small Round Cell Sarcomas with Rare EWS Gene Fusions. Identification of a Novel EWS-SP3 Fusion and of Additional Cases with the EWS-ETV1 and EWS-FEV Fusions

Lu Wang*, Rohit Bhargava*, Tao Zheng*, Leonard Wexler*, Margaret H. Collins{dagger}, Diane Roulston{ddagger}, and Marc Ladanyi*{sect}@

From the Department of Pathology,* and Human Oncology and Pathogenesis Program,{sect} Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York; the Department of Pathology,{dagger} Cincinnati Children's Hospital and Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio; and the Department of Pathology,{ddagger} University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan

@ To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ladanyim{at}mskcc.org.


   Abstract

Ewing family tumors (EFTs) are prototypical primitive small round blue cell sarcomas arising in bone or extraskeletal soft tissues in children or adolescents. EFTs show fusions of EWS with a gene of the ETS family of transcription factors, either EWS-FLI1 (90 to 95%) or EWS-ERG (5 to 10%). Rare cases with fusions of EWS to other ETS family genes, such as ETV1, E1AF, and FEV, have been identified, but their clinicopathological similarity to classic EFTs remains unclear. We report four new cases of EFT-like tumors with rare EWS fusions, including two with EWS-ETV1, one with EWS-FEV, and a fourth case in which we cloned a novel EWS-SP3 fusion, the first known cancer gene fusion involving a gene of the Sp zinc finger family. Analysis of these three new cases along with data on nine previously reported cases with fusions of EWS to ETV1, E1AF, or FEV suggest a strong predilection for extraskeletal primary sites. EFT-like cases with fusions of EWS to non-ETS translocation partners are also uncommon but involve the same amino-terminal portion of EWS, which in our novel EWS-SP3 fusion is joined to the SP3 zinc-finger DNA-binding domain. As these data further support, these types of EWS fusions are associated with primitive extraskeletal small round cell sarcomas of uncertain lineage arising mainly in the pediatric population.




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F. G. Barr and R. B. Womer
Molecular Diagnosis of Ewing Family Tumors: Too Many Fusions... ?
J. Mol. Diagn., September 1, 2007; 9(4): 437 - 440.
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