American journal of clinical pathology
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Am. J. Clin. Pathol. · Sep 2000
WT1 staining reliably differentiates desmoplastic small round cell tumor from Ewing sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor. An immunohistochemical and molecular diagnostic study.
Differentiating desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) from another similar small round cell tumor of childhood, the Ewing sarcoma/primitive neuroectodermal tumor (EWS/PNET), can be difficult because morphologic and immunohistochemical features overlap. We studied the predictive value of immunohistochemistry with an antibody to the C-terminal region of the Wilms tumor (WT1) protein for differentiating DSRCT from EWS/PNET in 24 malignant small round cell tumors that had been previously diagnosed as DSRCT or EWS/PNET by standard methods. ⋯ All 11 EWS/PNETs were WT1 antibody negative; 7 of 11 cases classified as EWS/PNET were informative by RT-PCR, and 7 of 7 showed an EWS-FLI-1 fusion. For cases in which the morphologic and immunohistochemical features are consistent with a diagnosis of DSRCT, WT1 antibody staining predicts the EWS-WT1 translocation with high sensitivity and specificity and is, therefore, useful for differentiating DSRCT from EWS/PNET when genetic information is unavailable.