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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)
Myofibroblastic tumors are fairly recently established soft tissue neoplasms. Although most of them appear to be benign, myofibrosarcoma of the soft tissue, seemingly their malignant counterpart, have been reported. We describe the clinicopathologic and radiologic features of four cases of myofibrosarcoma arising from the bone. All but one of the patients were women ranging in age from 60 to 71 years. Two tumors occurred in the metaphyses of distal femurs and the others arose in the iliac bones. On radiologic examination all tumors exhibited well-demarcated lytic destructive lesions without periosteal reaction. Two tumors were localized in the bone, whereas the other two extended into surrounding soft tissues. Histologically, all tumors were composed principally of a mixture of a cell-rich fascicular area and a hypocellular fibrous area. In the former area tumor cells had rather eosinophilic spindle-shaped wavy cytoplasm and were arranged in interlacing fascicles and small storiform patterns with variable numbers of inflammatory cells. Tumors occasionally showed prominent pleomorphism, and large cells with hyperchromatic nuclei were seen. In contrast, hypocellular areas had various features, including collagenous, hyalinous scar-like and rarely keloid-like areas. Focal coagulation necroses were present in all but one tumor. Immunohistochemically, the tumors were positive for vimentin, muscle actin (HHF35), alpha-smooth muscle actin, calponin, and desmin, whereas all of them were negative for high molecular weight
caldesmon
. On follow-up there was one fatal case with distant
metastases
, whereas the clinical courses of other cases after wide resection were excellent. Myofibrosarcoma of the bone has distinctive histopathologic features, which should be distinguished from those of other bone tumors with myoid differentiation.
...
PMID:Myofibrosarcoma of the bone: a clinicopathologic study. 1198 42
Gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) is now defined as a specific, KIT-expressing and KIT-signaling driven mesenchymal tumor of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. The specific identification of GIST has become more important after the availability of KIT-selective tyrosine kinase inhibitor Imatinib mesylate, STI571, commercially known as Gleevec/Glivec (Novartis Pharma, Basel, Switzerland) in the treatment of unresectable and metastatic tumors. GISTs are the most common mesenchymal neoplasms of the GI tract, and encompass most tumors previously classified as gastric and intestinal smooth muscle tumors. GISTs typically present in adults over 40 years (median age 55-60 years) and only exceptionally in children. They can present anywhere in the GI-tract from the lower esophagus to the anus. A great majority of GISTs occur in the stomach (60-70%) or small intestine (25-35%). Colon, rectum, appendix (together 5%) and esophagus (2-3%) are rare sites. Some GISTs are primary in the omentum, mesentery or retroperitoneum, unrelated to the tubular GI-tract, but most GISTs in these sites are
metastases
from gastric or intestinal primary. Histologically GISTs vary from cellular spindle cell tumors to epithelioid and pleomorphic ones, and morphology differs somewhat by site. By definition, GISTs are KIT(CD117)-positive. Positivity for nestin (90-100%) and CD34 (70%) are also characteristic but less specific features. Smooth muscle actins (20-30%) and heavy
caldesmon
(80%) are often expressed, whereas desmin is usually absent. Predictive of malignancy are mitotic rate over 5 per 50 HPF or size over 5 cm. However, mitotically inactive intestinal tumors can
metastasize
, and gastric tumors are in average less often malignant than the intestinal ones. True smooth muscle tumors, GI-schwannoma and undifferentiated sarcomas are the most important differential diagnoses. KIT activating mutations occur in 70-80% of cases. Their signaling consequences, clinical correlation and response to tyrosine kinase inhibitors, and specific genetic alterations are under intense investigation. Majority of these mutations are in-frame-deletions and missense mutations clustering in the 5'-end of juxtamembrane domain (exon 11). A rare mutation, an Ala502-Tyr503 duplication in exon 9, is specific for intestinal GISTs.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs): definition, occurrence, pathology, differential diagnosis and molecular genetics. 1281 76
Leiomyosarcoma of kidney is a rare lesion for which limited data are available. Cases coded as leiomyosarcoma of the kidney from three institutions were reviewed. These cases comprised 3 men and 7 women, 40 to 75 years of age. Immunohistochemistry was performed where possible and clinical follow-up information was obtained. On immunohistochemical staining, 6 of 6 tumors expressed smooth muscle actin, desmin, calponin, and h-
caldesmon
, and epithelial membrane antigen was positive in 1 of 5. Tumors were negative for cytokeratin and S-100 protein. Follow-up information was available for 9 patients. Two patients had
metastases
at diagnosis, four developed
metastases
, and two had recurrent disease. Five of 9 died of disease. Two patients were alive with no evidence of disease after 19 and 60 months, and 2 patients were alive with disease after 48 months and 56 months. Comparing outcome with tumor grade, the one patient with grade 1 tumor was alive with no evidence of disease; of 5 patients with grade 2 tumor, 2 died of disease, 1 was alive with no evidence of disease, 1 was alive with disease, and 1 was alive with extensive disease; all 3 grade 3 patients died of disease. In summary, the majority of renal leiomyosarcomas are intermediate or high grade with correspondingly poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Leiomyosarcoma of the kidney: a clinicopathologic study. 1504 6
Inflammatory leiomyosarcoma, a rare entity first described in 1995, has been characterized by smooth muscle differentiation, a near-haploid karyotype, and a surprisingly good prognosis. The morphology is similar to that of conventional leiomyosarcoma admixed with a chronic inflammatory infiltrate. Thus far, only 15 cases have been reported in the English language literature. We report the clinical and pathological features of 3 additional cases of inflammatory leiomyosarcoma. Two women (ages 64 and 25, respectively) and 1 man (age 32) presented with a thigh, ovary, and lung mass, respectively. Inflammatory symptoms, such as anorexia, fever, night sweats, abdominal pain, and diarrhea, coincided with the thigh and ovarian primaries. Immunohistochemical studies revealed diffuse positivity for desmin and poor expression for other smooth muscle and skeletal muscle markers (muscle-specific actin [0/3], alpha-smooth muscle actin 1/3 [focal], calponin [1/3],
caldesmon
[0/3], and myogenin [0/3]). CD68 was diffusely positive in both the histiocytes and spindle cell component in all cases. Ultrastructural evaluation of 1 case (lung primary) lacked definitive smooth muscle differentiation. Cytogenetic analysis in 1 of 2 cases that were karyotyped, identified a near-haploid karyotype, which has been reported in other cases of inflammatory leiomyosarcoma. The other case showed 2 clonal populations of cells with interstitial deletions of the short arm of chromosome 8 and the long arm of chromosome 9, respectively. The case without cytogenetic data was intimately associated with an ovarian mature teratoma. These data also suggest that inflammatory leiomyosarcoma may lack smooth muscle differentiation, characterized by diffuse immunoreactivity for desmin but lack of immunoreactivity for alpha-smooth muscle actin, calponin, and
caldesmon
. In addition, 2 of the 3 cases developed distant
metastases
to the lungs, which suggests that these lesions may have a worse prognosis than previously believed.
...
PMID:So-called "inflammatory leiomyosarcoma'': a series of 3 cases providing additional insights into a rare entity. 1586 83
The spindle cell variant of rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is uncommon and is most often encountered in the paratesticular region of children in whom it has a good prognosis. Only isolated cases in adulthood have been described. Sixteen cases of spindle cell RMS occurring in adults were retrieved from our files. Eleven patients were male and 5 were female. Patient age ranged from 18 to 79 years (median, 32 years). Tumor size varied from 1.5 to 35 cm (median, 6 cm). The head and neck region, including the oral cavity, parotid gland, nasopharynx, and nasal cavity, was the commonest affected area, accounting for >50% of the cases, followed by retroperitoneum, thigh, leg, subscapular area, hand, vulva, and paratesticular region (1 case each). Follow-up was available in 12 cases, ranging from 1 to 102 months (median, 16.5 months). Treatment modalities included surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation. Two patients died of uncontrolled local disease 13 and 27 months after diagnosis; 4 were alive without disease at 12, 17, 24, and 102 months, including 1 patient with metastasis to 10 of 50 pelvic lymph nodes at presentation; 3 are alive with localized disease at 16, 17, and 19 months; and 1 was followed for 6 months and showed persistent local disease. One patient is alive at 10 months after diagnosis with evidence of
metastatic disease
to bone, lungs, and breast. All the tumors showed long fascicles of spindle cells with elongated, vesicular nuclei and pale indistinct cytoplasm. Scattered spindled or polygonal rhabdomyoblasts with abundant brightly eosinophilic cytoplasm were present in all cases. In 3 cases, focal areas showed pseudovascular, sclerosing features. There were no round cell or pleomorphic areas. Positive immunohistochemical results were as follows: desmin (15 of 15 cases), myf-4 (12 of 12), fast myosin (7 of 9), myoglobin (2 of 3), HHF-35 (9 of 9), and SMA (11 of 14). One tumor was focally positive for keratins and EMA. All tumors were negative for
caldesmon
, S-100 protein, and GFAP. Spindle cell RMS is a rare neoplasm in adults and appears to have distinct clinicopathologic features when compared with cases occurring in the pediatric population. Specifically, it appears to be most common in the head and neck region, and although only limited follow-up is available so far, these lesions appear to have a more aggressive clinical course in adults.
...
PMID:Spindle cell rhabdomyosarcoma in adults. 1600 7
Myofibrosarcoma is a rare neoplasm that occurs mainly in the head and neck region and extremities of middle-aged patients. It often appears as a low-grade sarcoma and rarely metastasizes. We report the case of a 47-year-old male patient with a malignant mesenchymal pulmonary tumor affecting almost the entire lower left lobe. Clinically suggestive for a lung carcinoma, the tumor showed typical features of a myofibrosarcoma. A major spindle cell component was observed being positive for smooth-muscle actin, calponin, and vimentin, while stainings for desmin, h-
caldesmon
, alkaline phosphatase (ALK), and extensively studied cytokeratins were negative. Striking was a strong infiltrate with neutrophilic and eosinophilic granulocytes. DNA cytometry revealed aneuploidy with a peak in the near triploid range. Comparative genomic hybridization demonstrated multiple DNA gains and losses correlating with an aggressive clinical course. Shortly after resection of the primary tumor, the patient showed multiple distant
metastases
in the contralateral lung, the mediastinal lymph nodes, the left adrenal gland, and the pectoral and deltoid muscle, which responded well to chemotherapy. The case report will discuss the evidence for the final diagnosis of a primary pulmonary myofibrosarcoma and the differential diagnosis of sarcomatoid tumors of the lung.
...
PMID:Unusual sarcomatoid neoplasm of the lung suggesting a myofibrosarcoma. 1615 84
Uterine perivascular epithelioid cell tumor (PEComa) is very rare, and there have been only 27 reported cases. The differentiation of the tumor has been enigmatic, and the biologic behavior remains unclear. This study describes the clinical, histologic, and immunohistochemical features of four cases of uterine PEComa. The patients were 30, 32, 36, and 40 years old, and none of them had tuberous sclerosis complex. The size of the tumors ranged from 1 to 30 cm in diameter, and 3 of the 4 tumors were confined in the uterus. One tumor involved the left ovary and omentum. Microscopically, the tumors were characterized by an epithelioid arrangement of tumor cells, which had abundant clear to eosinophilic pale granular cytoplasm, and one tumor had moderately atypical nuclei. Coagulative necrosis was found in two cases. The mitotic figures ranged from 0 to 11 per 10 high power fields. Immunohistochemically, the tumors were positive for vimentin (4/4), HMB45 (4/4), h-
caldesmon
(4/4), alpha-smooth muscle actin (3/4), muscle actin (2/4), and desmin (3/4). They were uniformly negative for Melan A, CD10, and S-100 protein. Ultrastructural examinations were performed on one case and revealed no melanosomes, premelanosomes, or evidence of smooth muscle differentiation. One patient died of intestinal
metastases
17 months after surgery. The other patients have been well with no evidence of disease 8, 12, and 36 months after surgery. Uterine PEComa should be regarded as tumors with an uncertain malignant potential until long-term outcome data for a larger number of patients become available.
...
PMID:Perivascular epithelioid cell tumor of the uterus: report of four cases. 1617 79
Perivascular neoplasms comprise traditionally glomus tumor and hemangiopericytoma (HPC). Whereas glomus tumor represents a well-defined entity, the existence of HPC as a separate entity has been questioned because a number of neoplasms of different lines of differentiation are characterized by a HPC-like vascular growth pattern. Myopericytoma represents a recently delineated entity showing a HPC-like vascular pattern. A large series of myopericytoma of skin and soft tissues has been analyzed to further characterize the clinicopathologic spectrum of this entity. Fifty-four cases of myopericytoma of skin and soft tissues were retrieved and the histology reviewed. Immunohistochemical stainings using alpha-smooth muscle actin (ASMA), desmin, and h-
caldesmon
antibodies were performed, and clinical data and follow-up information were obtained from referring pathologists. Thirty-four patients were male and 18 were female (gender was unknown in 2 cases). Patient age ranged from 13 to 87 years (median, 52 years). The lower extremities were most commonly affected (26 cases) followed by the upper extremities (16 cases), the head and neck region (4 cases), and the trunk (2 cases); exact location was unknown in 5 cases. In 20 cases, the neoplasms were confined to the dermis, in 6 cases an extension into the subcutis was seen, and 24 as well as 4 cases arose in subcutaneous and deep soft tissue, respectively. Two cases were multicentric; and in 1 of these patients, multiple anatomic regions were involved. Histologically, in all cases, numerous thin-walled vessels and a concentric, perivascular arrangement of ovoid, plump spindled to round myoid tumor cells was seen. However, a broad morphologic spectrum ranging from hypocellular, fibroma-like (3 cases), myofibroma-like (2 cases), angioleiomyoma-like (12 cases), and HPC-like neoplasms (13 cases) to classic myopericytomas (14 cases) and immature, cellular lesions (2 cases) was noted. In addition, 2 neoplasms with focal glomoid features, 5 intravascular, and 1 malignant myopericytomas were found. Prominent cytologic atypia and increased proliferative activity (>3 mitoses/10 high power fields) was seen in 4 and 2 cases, respectively. Immunohistochemically, all cases tested stained positively for ASMA. In addition, 29 of 32 cases tested stained positively for h-
caldesmon
, whereas desmin was only focally positive in 3 of 33 cases. Follow-up information was available in 46 cases (range, 7-168 months; median, 48 months). Despite marginal or incomplete excision in 23 of 46 cases, only 2 neoplasms (1 malignant and 1 intravascular myopericytoma) recurred locally (within 1 and 4 years, respectively). Despite overlapping morphologic features to angioleiomyoma and myofibroma, myopericytoma represents a distinct perivascular, myoid neoplasm of skin and soft tissues, characterized by a broad morphologic spectrum of concentrically, perivascularly growing myoid tumor cells that stain positively for ASMA and often for h-
caldesmon
, whereas desmin is usually negative. Most cases of myopericytoma behave in a benign fashion, but local recurrences and rarely
metastases
may occur in atypical and malignant neoplasms.
...
PMID:Myopericytoma of skin and soft tissues: clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical study of 54 cases. 1633 Sep 49
Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor (IMT) of the urinary tract, also termed postoperative spindle cell nodule, inflammatory pseudotumor, and pseudosarcomatous fibromyxoid tumor, is rare and in the past was believed to reflect diverse entities. We reviewed a series of 46 IMTs arising in the ureter, bladder, and prostate, derived primarily from a large consultation practice. There were 30 male and 16 females aged 3 to 89 years (mean 53.6). Lesions were 1.2 to 12 cm (mean 4.2). There was a history of recent prior instrumentation in 8 cases. Morphology was similar to that previously described for IMT occurring in this region, with the exception of 1 case that focally appeared sarcomatous. Polypoid cystitis coexisted in 5 patients (11%). Mitoses were typically scant (0 to 20/10 hpf, mean 1). Necrosis was seen in 14 (30%) cases. Invasion of the muscularis propria was documented in 19 (41%). By immunohistochemistry (IHC), lesions at least focally expressed anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) (20/35, 57%), AE1/3 (25/34, 73%), CAM5.2 (10/15, 67%), CK18 (6/6, 100%), actin (23/25, 92%), desmin (15/19, 79%), calponin (6/7, 86%),
caldesmon
(4/7, 57%, rare cells), p53 (10/13, 77%), and most lacked S100 (0/14), CD34 (0/13), CD117 (2/13, 15%), CD21 (0/5), and CD23 (0/3). ALK gene alterations were detected by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) in 13/18 (72%) tested cases, including 2 with prior instrumentation; 13/18 (72%) showed agreement between FISH ALK results and ALK protein results by IHC. Most bladder IMTs were managed locally, but partial cystectomy was performed as the initial management in 7 cases and cystectomy in 1 (1 IMT was initially misinterpreted as carcinoma, 1 IMT was found incidentally as a separate lesion in a cystectomy specimen performed for urothelial carcinoma). Follow-up was available in 32 cases (range 3 to 120 mo; mean 33; median 24). There were 10 patients with recurrences (2 with 2 recurrences). Recurrences were unassociated with muscle invasion or with ALK alterations. In 2 cases, tumors of the urinary tract (TURs) showing IMT preceded (1 and 2 mo, respectively) TURs showing sarcomatoid carcinoma with high-grade invasive urothelial carcinoma accompanied with separate fragments of IMT. Even on re-review the IMT in these 2 cases were morphologically indistinguishable from other cases of IMT, with FISH demonstrating ALK alterations in the IMT areas in one of them. Both these patients died of their carcinomas. Lastly, there was 1 tumor with many morphological features of IMT and an ALK rearrangement, yet overtly sarcomatous. This case arose postirradiation for prostate cancer 4 years before the development of the lesion, with tumor recurrence at 4 months and death from intra-abdominal
metastatic disease
at 9 months. In summary, urinary tract IMTs are rare and share many features with counterparts in other sites, displaying similar morphology and immunogenotypic features whether de novo or postinstrumentation. Typical IMTs can be locally aggressive, sometimes requiring radical surgical resection, but none of our typical cases metastasized, although they can rarely arise contemporaneously with sarcomatoid urothelial carcinomas. For these reasons, close follow-up is warranted.
...
PMID:Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumors of the urinary tract: a clinicopathologic study of 46 cases, including a malignant example inflammatory fibrosarcoma and a subset associated with high-grade urothelial carcinoma. 1712 5
To describe the first case of leiomyosarcoma of the tibia with multiple skeletal
metastases
in China. A 31-year-old woman was referred to Peking University People's Hospital for evaluation of a lesion on the proximal left tibia. The radiographic examination showed the lesion had a moth-eaten destructive appearance with ill-defined border and soft tissue extension. The tumor is isointense to muscle on T1-weighed images and heterogeneous and of high signal on T2-weighed images. Technetium-99m bone scintigraphy demonstrated multiple markedly increased skeletal radioisotope uptake. The tibia lesion was surgically removed. Microscopically, tumor cells consisted of spindle shaped cells, arranged in bundles, with cigar-shaped and blunt-ended nuclei. Immunohistochemistry revealed that the tumor cells were positive for smooth muscle antigen (SMA) and
caldesmon
. It should be cautious to make the diagnosis of leiomyosarcoma arising in bone. After excluding metastasizing leiomyosarcoma of gastrointestinal tract, urinary system and uterus, the final diagnosis relies on immunohistochemical analysis, however, other spindle cell sarcomas have to be differentially diagnosed.
...
PMID:[A case of primary leiomyosarcoma of tibia with multiple skeletal metastases]. 1765 61
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