Cases reported "Soft Tissue Neoplasms"

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1/122. Unique cytological features and chromosome aberrations in chondroid lipoma: a case report based on fine-needle aspiration cytology, histopathology, electron microscopy, chromosome banding, and molecular cytogenetics.

    Chondroid lipoma is a rare, benign tumor that may mimic soft-tissue sarcoma clinically. Its histopathologic features may resemble hibernoma, myxoid liposarcoma, myxoid chondrosarcoma, and other lipomatous or chondroid neoplasms. In this study, a chondroid lipoma was analyzed by fine-needle aspiration cytology, histopathology, electron microscopy, chromosome banding, and metaphase fluorescence in situ hybridization. The results demonstrate that chondroid lipoma exhibits a characteristic pattern by fine-needle aspiration cytology, including a mixture of benign adipose tissue with lipoblastlike cells, and chondroblastlike cells with a fibrochondroid matrix. Cytogenetically, a three-way rearrangement between chromosomes 1, 2, and 5 was found, together with an 11;16 translocation with a breakpoint in 11q13, approximately 1 Mb proximal to the MEN1 region shown to be rearranged frequently in hibernoma. The presence of a karyotype of low complexity, but without any of the genetic aberrations characteristic for other types of soft-tissue tumors, indicate that chondroid lipoma develops along a unique pathogenetic pathway.
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ranking = 1
keywords = liposarcoma
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2/122. Benign recurring lipoblastoma in an adult versus well differentiated subcutaneous myxoid liposarcoma: clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical and molecular analysis of a unique case.

    Subcutaneous myxoid liposarcoma (ML) is exceedingly rare, with only two or three cases having been reported. lipoblastoma (LB), a rare fatty tumor that arises in infants and children, is unknown after adolescence. In contrast to ML, LB is often superficial. The two tumors can be difficult to distinguish due to many histologic similarities. We examined a 0.9 cm superficial subcutaneous nodule from the dorsal neck of a 48 year old man that had been growing slowly. Three and one half years later, a 0.4 cm palpable recurrent nodule was excised from the scar. The patient is now free of disease at 7.5 years. Because of these unusual features, we performed clinicopathologic, immunohistochemical and molecular analysis of this unusual tumor to decide if this represented a rare cutaneous ML or an unprecedented example of LB in an adult. The primary featured a thick fibrous pseudocapsule with foci of lymphocytes and infiltrating nests of semi-mature fetal-appearing adipocytic tissue. This surrounded a more immature cellular-but-cytologically-bland myxoid tissue featuring stellate cells and signet lipoblasts. There were fibrous sep at the periphery and the vasculature was rather inconspicuous. The 0.4 cm diameter recurrence was distinctly lobular and had minute satellite nodules. It was composed of uniform fetal-appearing bland myxoid lipoblastic tissue featuring signet ring lipoblasts surrounded by a few spindle cells. In both tumors, lipoblasts expressed S-100 protein. In the primary, 5% of the lesional cells were FXIIIa dendritic stromal histiocytes while in the recurrence, 15% of the lesional cells were FXIIIa dendritic cells. CD34 stained only scattered small capillaries. The Ki67 proliferation index was 1% in the primary and 3% in the recurrence. RT-PCR assay for TLS/FUS-CHOP fusion transcripts was negative despite three repeat tests performed on paraffin sections of the primary tumor in the presence of good m-rna internal controls. We reviewed the clinicopathologic and cytogenetic features of ML and LB. Based on this review and on the growth pattern, anatomic features and molecular data from the present case, we conclude that this tumor may represent the first reported case of adult LB.
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ranking = 5
keywords = liposarcoma
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3/122. Nuchal fibroma: a clinicopathological review.

    Nuchal fibroma, or collagenosis nuchae, is a benign soft tissue tumor that arises from the posterior cervical subcutaneous tissue, with a predilection for the interscapular and paraspinal regions. Because of its benign clinical course and its close histopathologic similarity to other benign head and neck lesions, this lesion may be misdiagnosed and underreported. The purpose of this paper is to review the histopathologic and radiologic findings unique to nuchal fibroma, and compare and contrast it to the other soft tissue neoplasms within the clinical differential diagnosis. These include several benign (elastofibroma, lipoma, fibrolipoma, nodular fasciitis) and rare malignant entities (fibrosarcoma, liposarcoma, fibromatosis).
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ranking = 1
keywords = liposarcoma
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4/122. Parachordoma of the tibia: report of a rare case.

    We report a case of recurrent parachordoma of the left anterior tibial region in a 64-year-old male patient. The tumor was a periosteal tender mass, and, histologically, displayed vague nodules of spindle to rounded eosinophilic cells embedded in a myxoid matrix. Large vacuolated (physalphorouslike) cells were noted as in sacrococcygeal chordoma. This tumor should be differentiated from myxoid chondrosarcoma, myxoid liposarcoma, chondromyxoid fibroma, and metastatic chordoma. The presence of physaliphorous cells in the tumor with positive immunoreactions caused by cytokeratin rules out the diagnosis of another myxoid tumor. The differential diagnosis from metastatic chordoma is basically made by clinicians. Even though parachordoma is usually regarded as a benign soft tissue neoplasm, two recurrences occurred in our case. Since the reported cases, including ours, have diverse clinical courses, it is essential to follow-up the patient carefully.
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ranking = 1
keywords = liposarcoma
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5/122. Myxoid liposarcoma in a 12-year-old girl.

    A 12-year-old girl developed a myxoid liposarcoma on the inner side of her right thigh. Liposarcomas are extremely rare at this age compared to benign lipoblastomas, which are the most frequent tumors of fatty tissue in childhood. The prognosis of myxoid liposarcoma is good, especially when, as in this patient, the tumor is located in the subcutis where a large and deep excision is possible and often curative.
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ranking = 6
keywords = liposarcoma
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6/122. Liposarcoma in the epidural space.

    STUDY DESIGN: A patient with myxoid liposarcoma in the lumbar epidural space is reported. OBJECTIVE: The subject was treated with marginal resection and posterior instrumentation. SUMMARY OF THE BACKGROUND DATA: Liposarcoma is a malignant tumor of the soft tissues. It is commonly seen in the thigh. Lumbar extradural space is an unusual localization. Two cases have been reported with this localization in the literature. methods: The authors have treated a female patient with myxoid liposarcoma in lumbar extradural space with marginal resection and posterior instrumentation. RESULTS: The histopathologic examination showed myxoid liposarcoma. Two cases have been reported in the literature. CONCLUSION: Myxoid liposarcoma is a malignant tumor of the soft tissues. The extradural tumor was probably originated from the epidural fat tissue. Although wide resection is advised in the thigh localization, extradural localization of the tumor can be treated with marginal resection if there is no invasion to the surrounding tissue.
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ranking = 4
keywords = liposarcoma
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7/122. Well-differentiated liposarcoma of the hand. Case report.

    Malignant lipomatous tumours of the hands are extremely rare. A 62-year-old man complained of an enlarging, soft, painless mass in his left hand. magnetic resonance imaging showed a fatty tumour with irregular septa, and an incisional biopsy showed it to be a well-differentiated liposarcoma. The tumour was resected en bloc and he had a course of external beam radiotherapy. Apart from a slight reduction in grip strength he was well 15 months later with no sign of recurrence.
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ranking = 5
keywords = liposarcoma
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8/122. Treatment of myxoid liposarcoma in pregnancy.

    Two cases of pregnancy associated with myxoid liposarcoma are presented. Both patients were treated with hyperthermoradiotherapy after the induced delivery of healthy infants and by surgical excision of the tumor 5 to 7 weeks after delivery. No local recurrence or distant metastasis occurred; the children have progressed normally for 4 and 5 years, respectively, after surgery. Because coexistence of pregnancy and sarcoma is rare, it is difficult for the clinician to develop an appropriate approach to the management of bone and soft tissue sarcoma during pregnancy. The literature was reviewed regarding the effect that pregnancy may have on the clinical behavior of sarcoma and the effect treatment for sarcoma may have on the fetus.
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ranking = 5
keywords = liposarcoma
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9/122. Morphologic-cytogenetic analysis of dedifferentiated liposarcomas with an extensive misleading leiomyosarcomatous component.

    This report describes two cases of recurrent retroperitoneal dedifferentiated liposarcoma characterized by an extensive leiomyomatous component that prevented the correct diagnosis before the last recurrence. Strong immunoreactivity with smooth muscle and desmin antibodies and ultrastructural features consistent with leiomyosarcoma were observed in the spindle-cell and/or myxoid-like components in all four recurrences in case 1, and in the spindle-cell component of the primary tumor and the first recurrence in case 2. In case 1, the correct diagnosis was suggested by the cytogenetic evidence of ring markers, a hallmark of well-differentiated/dedifferentiated liposarcoma. In case 2, tumor type was yielded mainly by the morphology of the second recurrence, which consisted entirely of a well-differentiated liposarcoma, a sclerosing inflammatory variant, as confirmed by the karyotype. Reevaluation of the first two surgical specimens of each case revealed small areas consistent with well-differentiated liposarcoma that had been previously overlooked. Despite the smooth-muscle antigen profile, both cases retained an mdm2 /p53 /cdk4 immunophenotype consistent with the genotype.
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ranking = 8.0940222810094
keywords = liposarcoma, dedifferentiated
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10/122. lipoblastoma with aberration in the long arm of chromosome 8.

    We report a case of lipoblastoma in a 6-month-old girl with a new chromosomal aberration, 46, XX, der (2) add (2) (p23) del (2) (q33), add (8) (q1?). In addition to the patient's age and pathological features, aberration of long arm of chromosome 8 in lipoblastoma can assist the differential diagnosis from myxoid or well differentiated liposarcoma.
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ranking = 1
keywords = liposarcoma
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