Haematologica (Apr 2020)

Genomic profiling of primary histiocytic sarcoma reveals two molecular subgroups

  • Caoimhe Egan,
  • Alina Nicolae,
  • Justin Lack,
  • Hye-Jung Chung,
  • Shannon Skarshaug,
  • Thu Anh Pham,
  • Winnifred Navarro,
  • Zied Abdullaev,
  • Nadine S. Aguilera,
  • Liqiang Xi,
  • Svetlana Pack,
  • Stefania Pittaluga,
  • Elaine S. Jaffe,
  • Mark Raffeld

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2019.230375
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 105, no. 4

Abstract

Read online

Histiocytic sarcoma is a rare malignant neoplasm that may occur de novo or in the context of a previous hematologic malignancy or mediastinal germ cell tumor. Here, we performed whole exome sequencing and RNA-sequencing (RNA-Seq) on 21 archival cases of primary histiocytic sarcoma. We identified a high number of genetic alterations within the RAS/RAF/MAPK pathway in 21 of 21 cases, with alterations in NF1 (6 of 21), MAP2K1 (5 of 21), PTPN11 (4 of 21), BRAF (4 of 21), KRAS (4 of 21), NRAS (1 of 21), and LZTR1 (1 of 21), including single cases with homozygous deletion of NF1, high-level amplification of PTPN11, and a novel TTYH3-BRAF fusion. Concurrent NF1 and PTPN11 mutations were present in 3 of 21 cases, and 5 of 7 cases with alterations in NF1 and/or PTPN11 had disease involving the gastrointestinal tract. Following unsupervised clustering of gene expression data, cases with NF1 and/or PTPN11 abnormalities formed a distinct tumor subgroup. A subset of NF1/PTPN11 wild-type cases had frequent mutations in B-cell lymphoma associated genes and/or clonal IG gene rearrangements. Our findings expand the current understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of this rare tumor and suggest the existence of a distinct subtype of primary histiocytic sarcoma characterized by NF1/PTPN11 alterations with predilection for the gastrointestinal tract.