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Soft Tissue Tumors

Malignant fibrous histiocytoma of soft tissue - inflammatory

 

Author: Nat Pernick, M.D., PathologyOutlines.com, Inc.

Reviewer: David Lucas, M.D., University of Michigan Health Systems (January 2009)

Revised: 5 October 2009, last major update June 2009

 

Definition

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● Neoplastic histiocyte-like cells mixed with, and often obscured by neutrophils and other inflammatory cells

 

Terminology

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● Most of these tumors are probably dedifferentiated liposarcoma (J Pathol 2004;203:822, see also Pathol Int 1997;47:642) or leiomyosarcoma

● Diagnosis of exclusion; recommended to take many sections and use immunohistochemistry to rule out mimics

 

Clinical

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● Very rare, usually age 40+ years, often retroperitoneal

● May be associated with fever, leukocytosis (leukemoid reaction) and eosinophilia

● May occur in skin with predominance of lymphocytes (Am J Dermatopathol 2002;24:251)

● Very aggressive with poorest prognosis of all MFH types (2/3 die of disease, 1/4 have distant metastases) although these studies probably included other morphologically similar disorders

 

Case reports

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● 4 year old boy with chest wall swelling (Fetal Pediatr Pathol 2004;23:319)

63 year old man with abdominal tumor (Case of Week #144)

 

Gross description

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● 8-10 cm, yellow due to xanthoma cells; firm, lobulated

 

Micro description

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● Commonly has storiform pattern, background of inflammatory cells (histiocyte-like, xanthoma, neutrophils, lymphocytes, eosinophils, plasma cells) which may obscure tumor cells

● Tumor cytoplasm may contain phagocytized neutrophils; nuclei are large and vesicular with prominent nucleoli

● May have bizarre giant cells or atypical mitotic figures but no necrosis

 

Micro images

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Acute inflammatory cells and                                         Large histiocyte-like cells with prominent

large histiocyte-like cells                                 nucleoli resembling lymphoma or carcinoma,

with variable fibroblasts

 

 

                                                  

Numerous histiocyte-like cells                                       Associated with orthopedic implant

resembling lymphoma     

 

Abdominal tumor:

                                               

 

                               

 

               

HMB-45                                 Melan-A

 

Cytology description

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● Neutrophilic infiltrate in and around tumor cells, which show prominent neutrophilic phagocytosis (Fetal Pediatr Pathol 2004;23:319)

 

Positive stains

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● MDM2, CDK4 (these cases may actually be dedifferentiated liposarcoma)

 

Molecular / cytogenetics

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● 12q13-15 amplification or gain (these cases may actually be dedifferentiated liposarcoma)

 

Differential Diagnoses

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● Myxoid or dedifferentiated liposarcoma (may need to submit additional sections of normal appearing fat to identify, perform MDM2 or CDK4 or obtain cytogenetics)

● Irradiated osteosarcoma

● Metastatic renal or adrenal carcinoma

● Reactive abscess-like lesion

● Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis (Int J Urol 2006;13:1000)

● Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor

● Hodgkin’s or anaplastic lymphoma (Mod Pathol 1997;10:438)

● Melanoma

 

End of Malignant fibrous histiocytoma of soft tissue > inflammatory

 

 

 

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