Metastatic pediatric sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma

  1. Aman Wadhwa2,8
  1. 1Children's Cancer Therapy Development Institute, Beaverton, Oregon 97005, USA;
  2. 2University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama 35233, USA;
  3. 3Omics Data Automation, Beaverton, Oregon 97005, USA;
  4. 4University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, California 95064, USA;
  5. 5New York Genome Center, New York, New York 10013, USA;
  6. 6Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, Washington 98105, USA;
  7. 7Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California 94304, USA
  1. Corresponding authors: charles{at}cc-tdi.org; awadhwa{at}peds.uab.edu
  1. 8 These authors contributed equally to this work.

Abstract

Sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma (SEF) is a rare and aggressive soft-tissue sarcoma thought to originate in fibroblasts of the tissues comprising tendons, ligaments, and muscles. Minimally responsive to conventional cytotoxic chemotherapies, >50% of SEF patients experience local recurrence and/or metastatic disease. SEF is most commonly discovered in middle-aged and elderly adults, but also rarely in children. A common gene fusion occurring between the EWSR1 and CREB3L1 genes has been observed in 80%–90% of SEF cases. We describe here the youngest SEF patient reported to date (a 3-yr-old Caucasian male) who presented with numerous bony and lung metastases. Additionally, we perform a comprehensive literature review of all SEF-related articles published since the disease was first characterized. Finally, we describe the generation of an SEF primary cell line, the first such culture to be reported. The patient described here experienced persistent disease progression despite aggressive treatment including multiple resections, radiotherapy, and numerous chemotherapies and targeted therapeutics. Untreated and locally recurrent tumor and metastatic tissue were sequenced by whole-genome, whole-exome, and deep-transcriptome next-generation sequencing with comparison to a patient-matched normal blood sample. Consistent across all sequencing analyses was the disease-defining EWSR1CREB3L1 fusion as a single feature consensus. We provide an analysis of our genomic findings and discuss potential therapeutic strategies for SEF.

Footnotes

  • [Supplemental material is available for this article.]

  • Received March 1, 2021.
  • Accepted July 2, 2021.

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