Malignant ectomesenchymoma
Malignant ectomesenchymoma '' is a rare, fast-growing tumor of the nervous system or soft tissue that occurs in children and young adults. MEM is part of a group of small round blue cell tumors which includes neuroblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and the Ewing's family of tumors.
Typical pathology
Malignant ectomesenchymomas may form in the head and neck, abdomen, perineum, scrotum, or limbs. The tumor is defined by its heterologous rhabdomyoblastic components. MEM histology is that of an elongated cell with an embryonic morphology. Onset time is relatively rapid and occurs early in life with the average age of onset is 0.6 years of age. However, children have been known to develop MEM up until they reach 5 years old. The neuroectodermal component has the potential to display any neuroblastic tumor including neuroblastoma, ganglioneuroblastoma, and ganglion cells with or without schwannian stroma. The rhabdomyoblastic component is derived from pluripotent migratory neural crest cells. The nature and wide migration patterns of neural crest cells allow them to give rise to both neural and non-nervous tissue including neurons, glia, smooth muscle, and melanocytes. Patients have the potential to display primary tumors in various locations prior to metastasis making this cancer particularly complicated.Differing representations across patients
Unfortunately, heterogenous tumors have the potential to represent further heterogeneity between patients. Because of the rarity of cases, in 2014 there were only 64 cases reported in the literature, most studies of ectomesenchymoma are limited by very small cohort sizes. In an investigation of six cases, researchers attempted to create a profile for the different presentations in ectomesenchymomal tumors. Mesenchymal elements, represented by rhabdomyosarcoma, were the dominant component in the majority of cases while embryonal and alveolar morphology had equal distribution. Patients with the alveolar subtype harbored the characteristic translocations including translocation of the FOXO1 gene fusing with the PAX3 or PAX7 gene. In the neuroectodermal component of the tumors, neuroblastic neoplasm was the most common presentation and the other two cases represented a primitive neuroectodermal tumor-like morphology.Genetic factors
Several translocations and genetic markers have been identified as possible oncogenic transformations in ectomesenchymoma:- FOXO1 fusion with PAX3 or PAX7 in alveolar expression
- Chromosome amplification of 6p21.32-p21.2 and 6p11.2 in embryonal RMS expression
- * Concurrent with increased expression of HMGA1 and HMGA2 proteins