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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (
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103,950
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Solitary fibrous tumor (SFT), first described as a pleural lesion, has been reported at numerous extrathoracic sites over the past 10 years. About 10% to 15% of intrathoracic SFTs are histologically or clinically malignant, but such cases have very rarely been described at other locations. Among 92 cases of extrathoracic SFT in our files, we identified 10 that either had recurred (2 cases) or had a least one atypical histologic feature (8 cases). The ten tumors occurred in five men and five women, 32 to 81 years old (median 56), measured 1.9 cm to 20 cm (median 11.5 cm), and were located in the abdomen/pelvis (4 cases), retroperitoneum (3 cases), groin, trunk, and upper arm. Nuclear atypia (8 cases), markedly increased cellularity (6 cases), areas of necrosis (4 cases), and greater than 4 mitoses/10 HPFs (3 cases) were seen in addition to the typical histologic features of SFT. Six tumors had at least two of these atypical histologic features. Nine cases were positive for CD34, six were positive for O-13, and one was focally positive for
smooth muscle actin
. Eight were excised completely. Subsequent follow-up revealed tumor relapse in eight cases (follow up 6-180 months, median 24). Four patients had local recurrence at 12 to 168 months. Distant metastasis developed at 1 to 6 years in five cases with spread to lung (2 cases), liver (4 cases), and bone.
Metastasis
or local recurrence developed within 2 years in five patients. To date, no patient has died of their tumor. These findings demonstrate that nuclear atypia, hypercellularity, greater than 4 mitoses/10 HPFs, and necrosis may be seen in up to 10% of extrathoracic SFTs, and are associated with, but are not by themselves predictive of, aggressive clinical behavior. In addition, our findings confirm that the behavior of extrathoracic SFTs is unpredictable, entirely comparable to that of their better known pleural counterparts, and confirm that patients with SFTs in all locations require careful, long-term follow up. It is probably unwise to regard any such lesion as definitely benign.
...
PMID:Atypical and malignant solitary fibrous tumors in extrathoracic locations: evidence of their comparability to intra-thoracic tumors. 985 Jan 76
Mucinous cystic neoplasms (MCNs) of the pancreas are uncommon tumors. The classification and biologic potential of these neoplasms remain the subject of controversy. Attempts to classify these tumors in a similar manner to ovarian MCNs remains controversial, as even histologically benign-appearing pancreatic MCNs
metastasize
and are lethal. One hundred thirty cases of MCNs were identified in the files of the Endocrine Pathology Tumor Registry of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology from the years 1979 to 1993. The pathologic features, including hematoxylin and eosin staining, histochemistry, immunohistochemistry (IHC), cell cycle analysis, and K-ras oncogene determination were reviewed. These findings were correlated with the clinical follow-up obtained in all cases. There were 130 women, aged 20-95 years (mean age at the outset, 44.6 years). The patients had vague abdominal pain, fullness, or abdominal masses. More than 95% of the tumors were in the pancreatic tail or body and were predominantly multilocular. The tumors ranged in size from 1.5 to 36 cm in greatest dimension, with the average tumor measuring >10 cm. A spectrum of histomorphologic changes were present within the same case and from case to case. A single layer of bland-appearing, sialomucin-producing columnar epithelium lining the cyst wall would abruptly change to a complex papillary architecture, with and without cytologic atypia, and with and without stromal invasion. Ovarian-type stroma was a characteristic and requisite feature. Focal sclerotic hyalinization of the stroma was noted. This ovarian-type stroma reacted with vimentin,
smooth muscle actin
, progesterone, or estrogen receptors by IHC analysis. There was no specific or unique epithelial IHC. K-ras mutations by sequence analysis were wild type in all 52 cases tested. Ninety percent of patients were alive or had died without evidence of disease (average follow-up 9.5 years), irrespective of histologic appearance; 3.8% were alive with recurrent disease (average 10 years after diagnosis); and 6.2% died of disseminated disease (average 2.5 years from diagnosis). Irrespective of the histologic appearance of the epithelial component, with or without stromal invasion, pancreatic MCNs should all be considered as mucinous cystadenocarcinomas of low-grade malignant potential. Pancreatic MCNs cannot be reliably or reproducibly separated into benign, borderline, or malignant categories.
...
PMID:Mucinous cystic neoplasm (mucinous cystadenocarcinoma of low-grade malignant potential) of the pancreas: a clinicopathologic study of 130 cases. 988 99
We report a case of primary low-grade leiomyosarcoma of the mandible in an otherwise healthy young woman. The neoplasm presented as a painful, pericoronal gingival swelling that mimicked an acute periodontal infection. It was managed accordingly, with curettage, debridement, and antibiotics. When the lesion failed to respond to this treatment approach, a biopsy was performed. Microscopy revealed a malignant mesenchymal neoplasm which, on immunohistochemistry analysis, demonstrated reactivity for
smooth muscle actin
(
SMA
) and vimentin. This established the diagnosis of leiomyosarcoma; subsequently, an en bloc resection of mandibular bone and overlying soft tissue was performed. Close follow-up for over 10 years has revealed no evidence of recurrent or
metastatic disease
. Since the patient was taking oral contraceptives prior to the onset of the lesion, a possible link between estrogen and smooth muscle tumors is considered.
...
PMID:Leiomyosarcoma presenting as a mandibular gingival swelling: a case report. 1005 75
Three cases of epithelial-myoepithelial carcinoma (EMC) with coexisting areas of high grade carcinoma are reported. In two of the cases there was a previous recurrence, and in all three patients there had been a sudden increase in size before final surgery. The typical ductal and myoepithelial components of EMC showed the usual biphasic pattern and the expected immunophenotypes, with expression of wide spectrum cytokeratins, Cam 5.2 and EMA in the ductal part, and muscle-specific actin,
smooth muscle actin
, S-100 protein, vimentin and cytokeratins in the myoepithelial component. These areas also had a low mitotic count and low proliferation rate as measured by immunohistochemistry and by flow cytometry. Conversely, areas of high-grade tumour had the features of a large cell carcinoma, with focal mucin secretion in two cases. This high-grade component showed an epithelial immunophenotype in two cases, and was negative for all tested markers in the third one. The mitotic counts and the proliferation rates were much higher in these anaplastic areas. One of the patients died 3 months after treatment; another developed lymph node
metastases
1 year later and was alive after 6 years of follow-up. The third patient was alive without evidence of disease 7 months after wide surgical resection of the tumour. The possibility of anaplastic transformation in EMC makes thorough sampling mandatory in this type of neoplasm.
...
PMID:High-grade carcinoma component in epithelial-myoepithelial carcinoma of salivary glands clinicopathological, immunohistochemical and flow-cytometric study of three cases. 1033 39
Focal myxoid change is a well-recognized feature of solitary fibrous tumor (SFT), but to date, predominantly myxoid examples of SFT have not been reported. We describe seven cases of SFT in which stromal myxoid change affected 50% or more of the tumor examined, thus obscuring typical diagnostic features. Patients ranged in age from 35 to 68 years old (median, 45 yr), with an equal sex distribution. Tumor locations included pleura, orbit, and periparotid subcutaneous tissue, as well as four cases in deep soft tissue (two in the abdominal wall and one each in the chest wall and thigh). Myxoid areas were identified grossly in four cases. Histologically, the lesions were composed of bland spindle cells disposed haphazardly or with a lacy or reticulated appearance in a myxoid, richly vascularized stroma These myxoid areas were punctuated by small cellular aggregates in four cases, and areas showing diagnostic features of SFT were present in five of seven primary excision specimens. Atypical features suggestive of malignancy were not present in any of the cases. Immunohistochemically, all of the seven cases stained positively for CD34 and CD99 (013), and all were negative for
smooth muscle actin
, desmin, S-100 protein, epithelial membrane antigen, and pan-keratin. There were no recurrences or
metastases
reported in four patients with limited follow-up (median duration, 19 mo). Recognition of this uncommon morphologic subset of SFT is important because of possible confusion, particularly in small biopsy specimens, with a variety of myxoid spindle cell neoplasms with different biologic potential. These include low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma, myxoid synovial sarcoma, malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor, low-grade myxofibrosarcoma, myxoid liposarcoma, myxoid spindle cell lipoma, myxoid neurofibroma, and so-called "hemangiopericytoma."
...
PMID:Myxoid solitary fibrous tumor: a study of seven cases with emphasis on differential diagnosis. 1034 83
A case of so-called congenital fibro(leio)myosarcoma of the small intestine in a 18-day-old female baby, treated only with surgical resection, was studied by immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy in order to investigate the proliferating cell type. The tumour cells showed positivity only for vimentin and CD 34 and were negative for
smooth muscle actin
, desmin, alpha-sarcomeric actin, factor VIIIR: Ag and S-100 protein. Ultrastructural findings showed oval nuclei with prominent nucleoli, rare intracytoplasmic mitochondria and well developed rough endoplasmic reticulum. According to histoimmunological and electron microscopy findings the proliferating cells were likely to be of fibroblastic origin. A 7-year follow-up showed a favourable clinical evolution thus confirming that surgical resection can be a sufficient therapeutic approach. The morphological findings and clinical behaviour suggest that more appropriate terminology for this tumour would be "aggressive congenital fibromatosis" which better highlights its local progressive invasion without
metastases
.
...
PMID:Aggressive congenital fibromatosis of the small intestine in the newborn. Report of a case and review of the literature. 1066 58
Fibroepithelial stromal polyps of the vulvovaginal region are benign lesions that, when bland or hypocellular, are readily recognized. However those that exhibit bizarre cytomorphology, atypical mitoses, or hypercellularity, raising the possibility of malignancy, continue to be underrecognized. The authors reviewed a series of fibroepithelial stromal polyps to characterize further the morphologic features that can lead to a misdiagnosis of sarcoma. A total of 33 of 65 consecutive cases of fibroepithelial stromal polyps retrieved from the authors' consultation files were remarkable for marked hypercellularity (33 of 33), marked cytologic pleomorphism (21 of 33), mitotic counts of more than 10 mitoses per 10 high-power fields (12 of 33), and the presence of atypical mitoses (14 of 33). A total of 16 of 33 lesions had three or more of these features. Important morphologic clues to the diagnosis (shared with usual polyps at this site) were lack of an identifiable lesional margin, extension of abnormal stromal tissue up to the mucosal-submucosal interface, and the frequent presence of individually scattered multinucleate stromal cells, most often located close to the surface epithelium. Immunohistochemically, seven of 12 cases were desmin positive and one of 11 cases were
smooth muscle actin
positive. The age range of patients was 16 to 75 years (median, 32 years), and 21 patients (64%) were premenopausal. Sites included the vagina (18 of 33), cervix (seven of 33), and vulva (eight of 33). A total of 14 of 33 patients were pregnant, three patients were taking Tamoxifen, and one patient was on oral progesterone. Eight of 33 patients had multiple lesions at the time of presentation, of whom five were pregnant. Clinical follow-up was available in 21 of 33 patients. Three of 21 patients with follow-up had local, nondestructive recurrence. Two of these patients had multiple recurrences. None of the patients followed developed
metastases
. Cytologic atypia has been a previously recognized feature in these lesions; however, the occurrence of marked stromal cellularity and a mitotic rate of more than 10 mitoses per 10 high-power fields have not been emphasized previously. Moreover, the combination of these features has only rarely been documented. Awareness of the spectrum of histologic features that these lesions can exhibit is crucial in their accurate recognition, thus avoiding potential overtreatment.
...
PMID:Cellular pseudosarcomatous fibroepithelial stromal polyps of the lower female genital tract: an underrecognized lesion often misdiagnosed as sarcoma. 1068 Aug 91
We describe an autopsy case of primary hepatic leiomyosarcoma in a 68-year-old man with hepatitis C virus-related liver cirrhosis. The patient, who had a history of acute hepatitis 20 years previously, died of a ruptured hepatic tumor. At autopsy, a well-circumscribed 14 x 16 x 15 cm tumor replaced the medial site of the right hepatic lobe with multiple intrahepatic and distant
metastases
. Histologically the tumor, which had extensive central necrosis, consisted predominantly of well or moderately differentiated spindle-shaped cells, which were positive for
smooth muscle actin
and vimentin on immunohistochemical staining. In addition, clusters of markedly atypical cells and myxoid change of the matrix were discretely found in the focal and small areas of the tumor. These findings indicated that many sections were necessary for the histologically accurate estimation of primary hepatic smooth muscle tumor. The histological examination of a non-tumorous lesion showed liver cirrhosis. Hepatitis C virus was detected in the cytoplasm of cirrhotic hepatocytes by immunohistochemistry and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, but not in the tumor cells. This suggested that the virus was not directly involved in the development of primary hepatic leiomyosarcoma.
...
PMID:Primary hepatic leiomyosarcoma in a patient with hepatitis C virus-related liver cirrhosis. 1069 76
Primary giant cell tumors (GCTs) of soft tissue resembling osseous GCTs are uncommon but distinct entities. Malignant GCTs of soft tissue have been designated giant cell malignant fibrous histiocytomas; however, there is scant data regarding benign GCTs of soft tissue. Eleven benign and seven malignant GCTs of soft tissue were identified from the authors' consultation files and the surgical pathology files of the Vancouver General Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital. The tumors occurred in adults (eight men, 10 women; age range, 25-89 years; mean age, 54 years) in the extremities (n = 14) and in the trunk, abdomen, and pelvis (n = 4). In each patient the skeleton was normal and there was no history of prior osseous GCT. Tumors ranged in size from 0.8 to 9.0 cm. Eleven occurred in the superficial soft tissue and seven occurred in deep soft tissue. Grossly they were circumscribed and frequently hemorrhagic. Cystic change was present in seven tumors. Nine tumors were partially surrounded by a shell of reactive bone. In all tumors, multinucleated osteoclast-like giant cells were distributed uniformly and evenly among mononuclear cells. The histologically benign GCTs of soft tissue were identical to typical osseous GCTs. The mononuclear cells in these tumors lacked nuclear atypia or pleomorphism, and the mitotic rate within this population was low (mean, three mitoses per 10 high-power fields [HPF]). In the malignant GCTs of soft tissue, the mononuclear cells exhibited anisocytosis, nuclear atypia, pleomorphism, and readily detectable mitoses including atypical forms (mean, 25 mitoses per 10 HPF). None of the benign or malignant tumors exhibited neoplastic bone production. The benign and malignant GCTs of soft tissue demonstrated a similar immunohistochemical staining profile to GCT of bone ( 12 tumors examined), exhibiting strong positive staining for CD68 within multinucleated osteoclastlike cells, and focal staining of mononuclear cells for CD68, Ham 56, and
smooth muscle actin
. All tumors were treated by surgical resection. Follow-up information is available for 15 patients (range, 0-108 months). No benign tumor has recurred or metastasized. Of the four patients with malignant tumors for whom follow-up information is available, one died of
metastatic disease
at 13 months and one developed a local recurrence at 84 months but is alive, apparently free of disease after additional excisional surgery. Primary GCTs of soft tissue are distinctive neoplasms that, like osseous GCTs, exhibit a wide clinicopathologic spectrum. These neoplasms should be distinguished from other giant cell-rich soft-tissue tumors with which they may be confused.
...
PMID:Giant cell tumors of soft tissue: a clinicopathologic study of 18 benign and malignant tumors. 1071 52
The clinicopathologic features of 48 tumors that were histologically similar to gastrointestinal stromal tumors but occurred in the soft tissues of the abdomen were analyzed to determine their overall similarity to their gastrointestinal counterpart, their biologic behavior, and the parameters that predict risk for adverse outcome. Classic leiomyomas and leiomyosarcomas were specifically excluded. The tumors occurred in 32 women and 16 men, who ranged in age from 31 to 82 years (mean, 58 years). Forty tumors arose from the soft tissue of the abdominal cavity, and the remainder arose from the retroperitoneum. They ranged in size from 2.1 to 32.0 cm and varied from tumors composed purely of rounded epithelioid cells to those composed of short fusiform cells set in a fine fibrillary collagenous background with some cases showing a mixed pattern. Tumors displayed variable amounts of stromal hyalinization, myxoid change, and cyst formation. The tumors expressed CD117 (c-kit receptor) (100%), CD34 (50%), neuron-specific enolase (44%),
smooth muscle actin
(26%), desmin (4%), and S-100 protein (4%). Tumors were evaluated with respect to several parameters: size (<10 cm or >10 cm), cellularity (low or high), mitoses (0 to 2 per 50 high-power fields, >2 per 50 high-power fields), nuclear atypia (1 to 3+), cell type (epithelioid, spindled, or mixed), and necrosis (absent or present). These parameters were then evaluated in univariate and multivariate analysis with respect to adverse or nonadverse outcome, the former defined as metastasis or death from tumor. Follow-up information was obtained for 31 patients (range, 4 to 84 months; median, 24 months). One patient presented with an adverse event and, therefore, was excluded from subsequent analysis. Twelve patients (39%) developed
metastases
or died of tumor. In univariate analyses, cellularity, mitotic activity (>2 per 50 high-power fields), and necrosis were associated with statistically significant increases in the risk for adverse outcome. Despite the relatively small sample size, in a multivariable analysis mitotic activity (relative risk, 7.46; P = .09) and necrosis (relative risk, 3.75; P = .07) displayed trends toward independent predictive value. No association was noted between histologic pattern and outcome. Although only 39% of tumors behaved in a malignant fashion, this figure probably represents a conservative estimate because long-term follow-up (>5 years) was available for only a limited number of patients. Stratification of patients who have extragastrointestinal stromal tumor into those with 0 to 1 adverse histologic factors versus those with 2 to 3 offers the advantage of separating patients into two groups that have a markedly different risk for adverse outcome in the short term (0.02 events versus 0.54 events per person-year; P < .001, respectively). Extragastrointestinal (soft tissue) stromal tumors are histologically and immunophenotypically similar to their gastrointestinal counterpart but have an aggressive course more akin to small intestinal than gastric stromal tumors.
...
PMID:Extragastrointestinal (soft tissue) stromal tumors: an analysis of 48 cases with emphasis on histologic predictors of outcome. 1082 31
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