| Literature DB >> 35954326 |
Louis Gros1, Angelo Paolo Dei Tos2,3, Robin L Jones4,5, Antonia Digklia1,6.
Abstract
An inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor (IMT) is a neoplasm composed of myofibroblastic and fibroblastic spindle cells accompanied by inflammatory cells, including lymphocytes and eosinophils. It is an ultra-rare tumor, the optimal management of which remains to be defined. Surgery is the treatment of choice for localized tumors. The treatment of advanced disease is not precisely defined. Chemotherapy regimens result in an overall response rate of approximately 50% based on retrospective data. The latest pathophysiological data highlight the role played by tyrosine kinase fusion genes in IMT proliferation. Anaplast lymphoma kinase (ALK) oncogenic activation mechanisms have been characterized in approximately 80% of IMTs. In this context, data regarding targeted therapies are most important. The aims of this article are to review the latest published data on the use of systematic therapy, particularly the use of molecular targeted therapy, and to publish an additional case of an IMT with Ran-binding protein 2 (RANPB2)-ALK fusion showing a long response to a tyrosine kinase inhibitor.Entities:
Keywords: ALK; epithelioid inflammatory myofibroblastic sarcoma tyrosine kinase inhibitors; inflammatory myofibroblastic tumour
Year: 2022 PMID: 35954326 PMCID: PMC9367282 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14153662
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Figure 1Hematoxylin eosin stain of an inflammatory myofibroblastic tumour composed of myofibroblast cells (red arrow) and inflammatory infiltrates (black arrow). Bar = 20 µm.
Figure 2Hematoxylin and eosin stain of an EIMS composed of epithelioid cells (red arrow) and inflammatory infiltrates (black arrow). Bar = 10 µm.
Figure 3Immunostaining of an IMT with an antibody against anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) and a peroxidase conjugated secondary antibody. Positive cells were stained with diaminobenzidine (black arrow). Nuclei were counterstained with hematoxylin (red arrow). Bar = 10 µm.
Clinical and pathological features of the reported cases of epithelioid inflammatory myofibroblastic sarcoma.
| Author, Year | Number of Cases | Age Range | M:F | Location | Treatment | Recurrence/ | Dead of Disease | ALK IHC Pattern | Fusion Partner |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Butrynski J et al., | 1 | 44 | M | Intraabdominal | SE, HPP, CT Imatinib | Yes | - | Nuclear membrane |
|
| Mariño-Enríquez A et al., | 11 | 6–63 | 10:1 | Intraabdominal | SE (2) | 10 | 5 out of 8 in which follow-up available | Nuclear membrane 9 out of 11 Cytoplasmic with perinuclear attenuation in 2 of 11 | 9 |
| Li J et al., | 2 | 19 and 39 | 1:1 | Pelvic cavity | SE | 2 | 1 | Nuclear membrane |
|
| Kozu et al., | 1 | 57 | M | Pleural cavity | CT + ALKi | Yes | SE | Cytoplasmic pattern with perinuclear accentuation |
|
| Kimbara S et al., | 1 | 22 | M | Intraabdominal | SE + CT + ALKi | Yes | No F/U after 10 months | Nuclear membrane |
|
| Kurihara-Hosokawa K et al., | 1 | 22 | M | Intraabdominal | SE + ALKi | Yes | No | Nuclear membrane |
|
| Rafee S et al., | 1 | 55 | F | Intraabdominal | CT | Yes | Nuclear membranous staining | Only | |
| Fu X et al., | 1 | 21 | M | Lung | SE | Bone metastasis | No F/U after 3 months | Cytoplasmic | Only |
| Bai Y et al. | 1 | 65 | M | Intraabdominal | Yes | No F/U | No mentioned | No mentioned | |
| Wu H et al., | 1 | 47 | F | Intraabdominal | Yes | Yes | Nuclear membrane |
| |
| Sarmiento et al., | 1 | 71 | M | Pleural | SE + ALKi | No | Alive | ALK positive—pattern not mentioned | Only |
| Lee JC et al., | 5 | 16–76 | 3:2 | Liver (1) | SE (3) | 4 DOD within 12 months | Cytoplasmic (2) | ||
| Liu Q et al., 2015 [ | 1 | 22 | M | Intraabdominal | SE + ALKi | Yes | Alive | Nuclear membrane |
|
| Yu L et al., 2016 [ | 5 | 15–58 | 2:3 | Intraabdominal | 37: SE | Yes | 37: No recurrene, alive | Nuclear membrane pattern in 4 cases | 5 tumors showed |
| Jiang et al., 2017 [ | 1 | 45 | M | Intraabdominal | SE + ALKIi adjuvant (Crizotinib –stop for severe vomiting + elevation AST et ALT) | Metastasis to liver, spleen, small intestine et al. | Yes | Cytoplasmic |
|
| Lee et al., 2017 [ | 9 | 7 months-76 | 6:3 | Intraabdominal | SE (9) | Yes 9 out of 9 | 6 | 4 Nuclear membrane ( |
|
| Fang et al., | 1 | 52 | F | Small bowel | ? | ? | Yes (8 months) | ? |
|
| Du X et al., 2018 [ | 1 | 26 | M | Intraabdominal | SE + CT | Yes | Yes | Cell nuclei |
|
| Xu X et al., | 1 | 28 | M | Intraabdominal | ALKi | Yes | No |
| |
| Hallin M et al., | 1 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - | |
| Xu P et al., | 1 | 35 | F | Gastric | SE | No | No (limited F/U) | Cytoplasmic | |
| Zhang S et al., | 1 | 46 | F | Intraabdominal | SE | Yes | Yes (16 months) | Yes | 2p23 |
| Liu D et al., | 1 | N/A | N/A | Sigmoid colon | SE + ALKi | Yes | N/A | Perinuclear |
|
| Kopelevich A et al., | 1 | 17 | M | Renal | SE + ALKi | Yes | N/A | N/A |
|
| Zilla et al., | 1 | 80 | M | Right groin | SE | ? | No G/U | Nuclear membrane |
|
| Chopra S et al., | 1 | 72 | F | Brain | SE | Yes | At 4 months | Cytoplasmic |
|
| Gadeyne L et al., | 1 | 27 | F | Cutaneous | SE | No | No | Very clear cytoplasmic staining with perinuclear accentuation |
|
| Collins K et al., | 1 | 43 | F | Uterus | SE + CT | Yes | No | Nuclear membrane |
|
| Wang S | 1 | 42 | F | Intraabdominal | SE | Yes | No |
| |
| Current case | 1 | 39 | F | Intraabdominal | ALKi | Yes | Nuclear membrane |
|
N/A—not available. SE—surgical excision. CT—chemotherapy. RT—radiotherapy. ALKi—ALK inhibitor. F/U—Follow up.
Figure 4Positron emission tomography (PET) scans showing evolution in time of the abdominal EIMS with large hypermetabolic mesenteric mass, associated with several hypermetabolic intraperitoneal nodules (A) A clear morpho-metabolic regression of the mesenteric mass and secondary intraperitoneal implants previously visualized 3 and 6 months after targeted therapy with alectinib (B,C). (A) Baseline. (B) After 3 months of alectinib. (C) After 6 months of alectinib.