Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
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Dedifferentiated liposarcoma is uncommon, and only a small number of cases have been documented. We describe the clinicopathologic features in a series of 32 cases. All patients were adults (age range, 37-83 years; median, 67 years); 20 were men and 12 were women. Commonest site was the retroperitoneum (fifteen cases); six cases arose in the limbs, four in the paratesticular region, three in the peritoneal cavity, two on the trunk, and one each in the buttock and larynx. One primary tumor was subcutaneous. Thirty tumors arose de novo (i.e., combined with well-differentiated tumor in the primary lesion), while two developed in recurrences of a previously well-differentiated liposarcoma. The well-differentiated component was most often lipoma-like and typically there was a histologically abrupt transition to spindle celled nonlipogenic tumor. The dedifferentiated component most often resembled either storiform "malignant fibrous histiocytoma" ("MFH") with limited pleomorphism or myxofibrosarcoma (myxoid "MFH"); the latter pattern is rarely otherwise seen in the retroperitoneum. A small number of cases showed appearances reminiscent of myxoid embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. An unusual feature in three cases was the occurrence of a discontinuous micronodular pattern of dedifferentiation. Average follow-up of 5.6 years (range, 3 months to 33 years) in 27 cases have revealed local recurrence in 14 patients and systemic metastases in only four patients. The primary sites of the metastasising cases were upper back, thigh, retroperitoneum, and paratesticular region. There have been only seven tumor-related deaths. Good prognosis in de novo dedifferentiated liposarcomas seems unrelated to the extent or morphologic pattern of dedifferentiation. However, high mitotic activity in the dedifferentiated component was associated with a more aggressive clinical course. Our study underlines that dedifferentiation in peripherally located or even subcutaneous liposarcomas does occur, albeit rarely, and that dedifferentiated liposarcomas of the limbs may metastasize. The results suggest that dedifferentiated liposarcomas, as a subgroup among the "MFH-like" sarcomas, have a better prognosis than pleomorphic sarcomas as a whole.
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PMID:Dedifferentiated liposarcoma. Clinicopathologic analysis of 32 cases suggesting a better prognostic subgroup among pleomorphic sarcomas. 757 81

Dedifferentiated liposarcoma (DDL) has been defined as a tumor composed of well-differentiated liposarcoma (WDL) associated with or progressing to a nonlipogenic, high-grade sarcoma. One might expand this definition of DDL to include low-grade dedifferentiation (LGDD), because tumors with LGDD alone are capable of metastasizing. We studied 20 cases of retroperitoneal WDL with or without LGDD and/or high-grade dedifferentiation (HGDD) to semiquantitate the amount of WDL, LGDD, and HGDD in each case and to correlate the amounts of these components with clinical outcome. For each case, a composite estimate of each of these components was obtained. Thirteen patients (65%) of 20 had an adverse outcome (AO). Within this group, metastatic disease developed in 3 patients, 2 of whom had areas of HGDD (40% and 20%) in their initial excisions, whereas 1 patient had 30% LGDD and 0% HGDD. Of the patients with AOs, 12 (92%) had LGDD areas, 4 (31%) had HGDD areas, and 1 (8%) had pure WDL. Of the seven patients without AOs, three had recurrences, but metastatic disease did not develop in any. All of these seven patients had some element of WDL, five (71%) had LGDD areas, two (29%) had HGDD areas (20% in both cases), and two (29%) had pure WDL. There was no significant difference in clinical outcome between those patients with WDL and those with WDL/LGDD or WDL/LGDD/HGDD. We conclude that recurrences develop in most patients with retroperitoneal WDL and that most of these patients die as a result of local effects of the tumor. Metastases are rare and may occur in patients with tumors with either LGDD, HGDD, or both but do not occur in pure WDL. Neither the amount of LGDD nor HGDD correlates with clinical outcome. LGDD areas, as defined in this study, are commonly seen in de novo retroperitoneal WDLs.
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PMID:Well-differentiated liposarcoma of the retroperitoneum: a clinicopathologic analysis of 20 cases, with particular attention to the extent of low-grade dedifferentiation. 912 16

Laryngeal and hypopharyngeal liposarcomas are extraordinarily infrequent tumors. To the best of our knowledge there are fewer than 40 well-documented cases reported to date. Almost all of them are well-differentiated liposarcomas, with only 2 laryngeal-hypopharyngeal dedifferentiated liposarcomas. Dedifferentiated liposarcoma is defined as a well-differentiated liposarcoma with areas of high-grade spindle cell nonlipogenic sarcoma. The well-differentiated areas may be of a lipoma-like, sclerosing, or mixed type, and the dedifferentiated areas most frequently are of malignant fibrous hystiocytoma-like type. Despite its commonly pleomorphic histology, dedifferentiated liposarcoma does not behave as aggressively as most pleomorphic sarcomas of adulthood; however, it has the capacity to metastasize, in contrast to its well-differentiated counterpart. We present a case of dedifferentiated liposarcoma arising in the pyriform sinus, an event only twice reported previously in the literature.
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PMID:Dedifferentiated liposarcoma of the pyriform sinus: report of a case and review of the literature. 1192 75

The dedifferentiated component of dedifferentiated liposarcoma shows wide histologic variation including tumors with heterologous differentiation. Myofibroblastic differentiation has been recognized in dedifferentiated liposarcoma. However, tumors closely resembling inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor have not. We report the clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical, and molecular finding in 6 cases of dedifferentiated liposarcoma with inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor-like features treated at our institution. The tumors occurred mostly in middle age or elderly men, involved mostly the inguinal/scrotal region or retroperitoneum, and behaved aggressively. Microscopically, the dedifferentiated component closely resembled or, if taken out of context, was indistinguishable from inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor. All 3 major patterns seen in inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor (myxoid, cellular, and hypocellular fibrous) were represented. Areas resembling nodular fasciitis or desmoid fibromatosis were frequent findings. One tumor had heterologous osseous differentiation. In 4 tumors the inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor-like areas were diffuse, whereas in 2 they were combined with noninflammatory myofibroblastic tumor-like high-grade sarcoma. Five tumors stained for smooth muscle actin or desmin, none stained for ALK-1, 5 stained for MDM2, and 5 had amplified MDM2 by fluorescence in situ hybridization. Well-differentiated liposarcomatous components were present in every tumor. All patients developed locally recurrent or metastatic disease. At last follow-up 2 patients had died of disease and 2 were alive with disease. Dedifferentiated liposarcoma can have prominent inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor-like features, a finding that further expands its histologic spectrum. Awareness of this finding can prevent one from misdiagnosing dedifferentiated liposarcoma as inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor, a much less aggressive neoplasm.
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PMID:Dedifferentiated liposarcoma with inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor-like features. 2043 81

Dedifferentiated liposarcoma (LPS) is a malignant adipocytic neoplasm defined as the transition from well-differentiated LPS to a nonlipogenic sarcoma. Heterologous differentiation is seen in 5% to 10% of dedifferentiated LPS, usually with myogenic or osteo/chondrosarcomatous elements. Adipocytic differentiation in the dedifferentiated component is incompatible with the current definition of dedifferentiated LPS. Pleomorphic LPS is a high-grade sarcoma containing lipoblasts. At least in areas, pleomorphic LPS can be indistinguishable from dedifferentiated LPS, except for the presence of lipoblasts in pleomorphic LPS and well-differentiated LPS areas in dedifferentiated LPS. We evaluated 12 unusual liposarcomas: 11 cases with pleomorphic LPS-like morphology affecting patients with concomitant or previous well-differentiated/dedifferentiated LPS, and 1 case resembling inflammatory "MFH" with scattered lipoblasts. Clinical and histologic features were reviewed. Immunohistochemistry for MDM2 and CDK4 was carried out. Amplification of 12q13 to q15 was studied by FISH analysis of the HMGA2 locus. The tumors arose in the retroperitoneum (7), proximal lower extremity (3), chest wall (1), and neck (1) of 9 males and 3 females (median age 66 y; range 49 to 76). Size ranged from 9 to 32 cm (median 23 cm). In 3 cases, there was an abrupt transition between well-differentiated LPS and sheets of pleomorphic lipoblasts, indistinguishable from pleomorphic LPS. Four cases consisted of otherwise typical dedifferentiated LPS (with adjacent well-differentiated LPS), except for the presence of lipoblasts in the high-grade component. One case contained both nonlipogenic spindle cell areas and an inflammatory "MFH"-like component with numerous admixed lipoblasts. Four cases were composed exclusively of pleomorphic LPS-like areas developing in 1 of the recurrences or metastases of a prior typical dedifferentiated LPS. Two cases also showed heterologous smooth muscle differentiation. MDM2 and CDK4 were positive in both the dedifferentiated LPS and pleomorphic LPS-like components in 12/12 and 11/12 cases, respectively. FISH analysis showed high-level amplification of 12q14.3 in all 8 cases successfully tested. Karyotypes were available for 3 cases and showed ring and giant marker chromosomes. Follow-up, available for 11 patients, ranged from 19 to 196 months (median 36 mo). Seven patients developed local recurrences (multiple in 3), and 3 developed lung metastases. Thus far, 5 patients have died of disease, 3 are alive with recurrent or metastatic disease, and 3 are alive with no evidence of disease. We conclude that dedifferentiated LPS can show lipoblastic differentiation in the high-grade component, resulting in areas indistinguishable from pleomorphic LPS. The available clinical and molecular data support the notion of "homologous" lipoblastic differentiation in dedifferentiated LPS, rather than mixed-type LPS.
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PMID:Dedifferentiated liposarcoma with "homologous" lipoblastic (pleomorphic liposarcoma-like) differentiation: clinicopathologic and molecular analysis of a series suggesting revised diagnostic criteria. 2058 77

Dedifferentiated liposarcoma (DDL) of the spermatic cord is rare, with limited data regarding morphology and prognosis. We analyzed the morphologic spectrum of DDL of the spermatic cord and its clinical significance in 42 patients from 1990 to 2014. The median age of the patients was 70.5 years (range: 43 to 90 y). The median tumor size was 10.9 cm (range: 3 to 30 cm). Six cases were low-grade DDL, 28 were high-grade DDL, and in 8 cases both coexisted. Five cases had osteosarcoma, and 2 had leiomyosarcoma differentiation. Low-grade DDL had a fibrosarcoma-like (n=11), myxofibrosarcoma-like (n=2), and fibrosarcoma and inflammatory-like (n=1) pattern. High-grade DDL had a fibrosarcoma-like (n=22), undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma-like (n=7), myxofibrosarcoma and undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma-like (n=4), fibrosarcoma and undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma-like (n=2), and myxofibrosarcoma-like (n=1) pattern. Resection margins were positive in 22, negative in 13, and unknown in 7 cases. MDM2 was positive in 24/24 cases. Two patients received neoadjuvant radiotherapy (1 with chemotherapy). Patients received postoperative radiation (n=13), reexcision (n=5) with radiation (n=3), chemotherapy (n=2), chemotherapy and radiation (n=1), no therapy (n=11), and unknown (n=6). Follow-up information was available in 31 patients (mean: 54.2 mo; median: 38.5 mo; range: 2 to 180 mo). Seven patients developed local recurrence. Two patients had systemic metastases and succumbed to disease. Recurrence developed at an average of 40.9 months (median: 24 mo; range: 12 to 100 mo) after resection. Average follow-up in patients without recurrence was 45.2 months (median: 25 mo; range: 2 to 180 mo) (P=0.87). Margin status, size, and grade did not correlate with recurrence (P>0.05). Thus, DDL of the spermatic cord includes a spectrum of morphologic patterns. Complete excision is difficult at first attempt. Local recurrence is common, and relatively few patients develop systemic disease.
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PMID:Dedifferentiated liposarcoma of the spermatic cord: a series of 42 cases. 2582 86

Dedifferentiated liposarcoma (DDL) is a histologically pleomorphic sarcoma, traditionally defined as well-differentiated liposarcoma with abrupt transition to high grade, non-lipogenic sarcoma. It can occur as part of recurrent well-differentiated liposarcoma, or may arise de novo. DDL most frequently occurs within the retroperitoneum, and while it is prone to local recurrence, it usually has a lower rate of metastasis than other pleomorphic sarcomas. We describe a case of retroperitoneal dedifferentiated liposarcoma in a 63-year-old male, who showed MDM2 amplification with fluorescence in situ hybridization, which displayed unusually aggressive behavior, with brain, lung and subcutaneous soft tissue metastases. As previous reports of metastatic liposarcoma have largely grouped DDL in with other (genetically and clinically distinct) liposarcoma subtypes, we highlight and discuss the rare occurrence of brain metastasis in MDM2-amplified retroperitoneal liposarcoma.
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PMID:Rare Aggressive Behavior of MDM2-Amplified Retroperitoneal Dedifferentiated Liposarcoma, with Brain, Lung and Subcutaneous Metastases. 2774 79

Dedifferentiated liposarcoma (DDLPS) demonstrates a variety of growth patterns, and their histologic resemblance to other spindle cell mesenchymal tumors has been widely recognized. However, epithelioid morphology in DDLPS has only rarely been documented. Here, we report 6 cases of DDLPS with striking epithelioid/epithelial features. The patients were 5 men and 1 woman with a median age of 61 years. All tumors were located in the internal trunk. During follow-up of 1 to 41 months, local recurrence, distant metastases, and tumor-related death occurred in 4, 2, and 4 patients, respectively. Beside well-differentiated liposarcoma component and conventional high-grade spindle cell morphology, all tumors focally exhibited growth comprising small or large epithelioid cells in diffuse or sheet-like proliferation. Rhabdoid cells were present in 2 cases. All 5 tumors tested harbored MDM2 amplification. Cytokeratin and/or epithelial membrane antigen were at least focally positive in all 5 tumors tested. One case contained a small focus of novel heterologous epithelial differentiation with acinar structures, wherein cytokeratin, MOC31, and claudin-4 were diffusely expressed and H3K27me3 expression was lost. DDLPS with epithelioid/epithelial features may lead to misdiagnosis of carcinoma or mesothelioma, and their diagnosis should be based on correlation with clinicopathologic and molecular findings. The epithelioid morphology in DDLPS may suggest an aggressive behavior based on this small series. In addition, we document 2 cases of MDM2-amplified undifferentiated neoplasm with epithelioid features in the internal trunk that lacked association with well-differentiated liposarcoma histology and showed rapid clinical course. Whether these latter tumors belong to DDLPS with epithelioid features requires further study.
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PMID:Dedifferentiated Liposarcoma With Epithelioid/Epithelial Features. 2871 66

Dedifferentiated liposarcoma is one of the most common sarcoma types in adults with a predilection for the retroperitoneum. We have recently encountered 6 cases of DDL composed predominantly of rounded, rhabdoid or epithelioid cells mimicking rhabdoid melanoma, epithelioid rhabdomyosarcoma or undifferentiated carcinoma. Patients were 5 males and one female aged 64 to 81 years (median, 68). Tumors originated in the retroperitoneum (n=5; 3 in the psoas muscle) and deep soft tissue of the thigh (n=1). All 3 patients with follow-up died of metastatic disease within 4 to 8 months. Preoperative biopsy diagnoses never suggested dedifferentiated liposarcoma as a possibility; instead carcinoma, rhabdomyosarcoma and lymphoma were on top of suggestions. Five resected tumors were composed predominantly (70%-100%) of anaplastic rounded to oval rhabdoid cells with prominent central nucleoli and paranuclear rhabdoid inclusions. Bi- and multinucleation was a constant feature. The background stroma showed variable myxoid changes and minor mixed inflammatory cells. Two cases showed homologous dedifferentiation and another had sclerosing spindle cell nodule but a well-differentiated lipomatous component was not seen in any. One biopsied case showed solely monotonous small round blue cells with scattered rhabdoid cells. Immunohistochemistry showed expression of MDM2 (6/6), CDK4 (5/6), pancytokeratin AE/1AE3 (4/6) and diffusely desmin and myogenin (2/6). All cases showed high-level co-amplification of MDM2/CDK4 by in situ hybridization. The SWI/SNF complex components (SMARCB1, SMARCA2, SMARCA4, ARID1A and PBRM1) were intact in all cases. This highly aggressive liposarcoma variant needs to be distinguished from a variety of neoplasms including undifferentiated carcinoma, melanoma, lymphoma, rhabdomyosarcoma and others.
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PMID:Dedifferentiated liposarcoma composed predominantly of rhabdoid/epithelioid cells: a frequently misdiagnosed highly aggressive variant. 2930 27