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Clinical impact of molecular and cytogenetic findings in synovial sarcoma

✍ Scribed by Ioannis Panagopoulos; Fredrik Mertens; Margareth Isaksson; Janusz Limon; Pelle Gustafson; Björn Skytting; Måns Åkerman; Raf Sciot; Paola Dal Cin; Ignace Samson; Mariola Iliszko; Janusz Ryoe; Maria Dêbiec-Rychter; Anna Szadowska; Otte Brosjö; Olle Larsson; Anders Rydholm; Nils Mandahl


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
159 KB
Volume
31
Category
Article
ISSN
1045-2257

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Synovial sarcoma is an aggressive soft‐tissue tumor that accounts for up to 10% of soft‐tissue sarcomas. Cytogenetically, synovial sarcoma is characterized by the t(X;18)(p11;q11), found in more than 95% of the tumors. This translocation results in rearrangements of the SYT gene in 18q11 and one of the SSX1, SSX2, or SSX4 genes in Xp11, creating a SYT/SSX1, SYT/SSX2, or SYT/SSX4 chimeric gene. It has been shown that patients with SYT/SSX1 fusion genes have a shorter metastasis‐free survival than do patients with SYT/SSX2. Previous studies have also suggested that clonal evolution may be associated with disease progression. In the present study, RT‐PCR analysis showed that all 64 examined synovial sarcomas from 54 patients had SYT‐SSX chimeric genes. SYT/SSX1 was found in 40 tumors from 33 patients, SYT/SSX2 in 23 tumors from 20 patients, and SYT/SSX4 in one case. Two patients had variant SYT/SSX2 transcripts, with 57 bp and 141 bp inserts, respectively, between the known SYT and SSX2 sequences. Patients with tumors with SYT/SSX1 fusions had a higher risk of developing metastases compared to those with SYT/SSX2 fusions (P = 0.01). The reciprocal transcripts SSX1/SYT and SSX2/SYT were detected using nested PCR in 11 of the 40 samples with SYT/SSX1 and 5 of the 23 samples with SYT/SSX2, respectively. Among 20 blood samples, SYT/SSX1 and SYT/SSX2 were detected in one sample each. The t(X;18), or variants thereof, was found cytogenetically in all patients but three. Among 32 primary tumors, the t(X;18) or a variant translocation was the sole anomaly in 10. In contrast, of the seven metastatic lesions that were investigated prior to radiotherapy, only one had a t(X;18) as the sole anomaly; all other tumors displayed complex karyotypes. Cytogenetic complexity in primary tumors was, however, not associated with the development of metastases. Tumors with SYT/SSX2 less often (4/12 vs. 7/15) showed complex karyotypes than did tumors with SYT/SSX1, but the difference was not significant. Combining cytogenetic complexity and transcript data, we found that the subgroup of patients with tumors showing simple karyotypes and SYT/SSX2 fusion had the best clinical outcome (2/8 patients developed metastases), and those with tumors showing complex karyotypes together with SYT/SSX1 fusion the worst (6/7 patients developed metastases). This corresponded to 5‐year metastasis‐free survival rates of 0.58 and 0.0, respectively (P = 0.02). © 2001 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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