The Utility of STAT6 and ALDH1 Expression in the Differential Diagnosis of Solitary Fibrous Tumor vs Prostate Specific Stromal Neoplasms

Solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) diagnosis in prostate can be challenging on small biopsies. Prostatic stromal tumors of unknown malignant potential (STUMP) and SFT have overlapping features. NAB2-STAT6 gene fusions that were recently identified in various SFTs lead to nuclear translocalization of STAT6. Nuclear STAT6 immunostaining is now considered an adjunct for SFT diagnosis. We evaluated STAT6 and an emerging stemness marker, ALDH1, in the differential diagnosis of SFT vs prostatic stromal lesions. 16 STUMPs, 12 SFTs and 4 prostatic stromal sarcomas (12 needle biopsies, 13 radical prostatectomies, 7 transurethral resections) were retrieved (1995-2015). Sections were stained with polyclonal STAT6 antibody (Santa Cruz, S20, 1:100) and monoclonal ALDH1 antibody (BD Biosciences, Clone 44, 1:250). In STAT6 cases, only unequivocal nuclear staining (with/without cytoplasmic staining) was considered positive. Cytoplasmic ALDH1 staining was counted positive. Ten of 11 evaluable SFTs demonstrated strong and diffuse nuclear STAT6 positivity, 4/16 STUMPs had nuclear staining that was weak (1/4) or focal (1/4). ALDH1 positivity was seen in 10/12 evaluable SFTs and 3/15 STUMPs. Prostatic stromal sarcomas were STAT6 negative (4/4), 2/4 were ALDH1-positive. The sensitivity and specificity for STAT6 for the diagnosis of SFT were 91 % and 75%, respectively. Co-expression of STAT6 and ALDH1 yielded the same sensitivity but improved the specificity (100%) for the diagnosis of SFT. STAT6 is a useful marker in the differential diagnosis of SFT vs STUMP. Using STAT6 and ALDH1 together increases specificity. STUMPS can show STAT6 positivity, when they do it is likely to be weak or focal.

Human pathology. 2016 Apr 08 [Epub ahead of print]

Gunes Guner, Justin A Bishop, Stephania M Bezerra, Diana Taheri, David J Zahavi, Maria Angelica Mendoza Rodriguez, Rajni Sharma, Jonathan I Epstein, George J Netto

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Pathology, Baltimore, MD, United States., Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Pathology, Baltimore, MD, United States., Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Pathology, Baltimore, MD, United States., Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Pathology, Baltimore, MD, United States., Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Pathology, Baltimore, MD, United States., Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Pathology, Baltimore, MD, United States., Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Pathology, Baltimore, MD, United States., Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Pathology, Baltimore, MD, United States., Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Pathology, Baltimore, MD, United States. Electronic address: .