Literature DB >> 11598176

Inflammatory pseudotumor and sarcoma of urinary bladder: differential diagnosis and outcome in thirty-eight spindle cell neoplasms.

K A Iczkowski1, J H Shanks, V Gadaleanu, L Cheng, E C Jones, R Neumann, A G Nascimento, D G Bostwick.   

Abstract

We assessed diagnostic criteria among 38 spindle cell tumors of the urinary bladder and obtained follow-up in 36 patients. Patients comprised 28 males and 10 females aged 2.5 months to 87 years. Hematuria was the commonest presenting symptom (27 patients). After review and immunohistochemical workup, 17 patients had inflammatory pseudotumor (myofibroblastic tumor), 4 postoperative spindle cell nodule, 1 leiomyoma, 13 sarcoma (7 low-grade; 6 high-grade), and 3 carcinoma. Mean age was 38 years for pseudotumor (range 15 to 74), 65 for postoperative spindle cell nodule, 51 for sarcoma, and 76 for carcinoma. Size of pseudotumor averaged 4.4 +/- 0.7 cm (range 1.5 to 13.0), similar to sarcoma, 4.0 +/- 0.6 cm (range 0.5 to 7.0). Similar proportions of benign tumors and sarcomas had muscularis propria invasion. The criteria that best differentiated sarcoma from inflammatory pseudotumor were presence of necrosis at the tumor-detrusor muscle interface in muscle-invasive cases, and nuclear atypia. Sarcoma also had less prominent microvasculature, less variable cellularity, consistently > or =1 mitotic figure per 10 high-power fields, and predominant acute inflammation without plasma cells. p53 protein nuclear immunostaining was moderate, unlike the rare to absent staining in pseudotumors. Because all 12 sarcomas were desmin-negative, we did not call them leiomyosarcoma; they overlapped with benign tumor in epithelial, mesenchymal, and actin immunostaining. Among 12 sarcoma patients, 2 died of tumor (at 3 months). Two of four experienced tumor recurrence after partial cystectomy (2 and 26 months). No pseudotumors recurred after transurethral resection or partial cystectomy, although one patient, 5 months after transurethral resection, had histologically identical pseudotumor that the surgeon considered residual. Another patient with pseudotumor, not a candidate for tumor ablation after transurethral resection, had continued tumor growth and he died of urosepsis. In conclusion, inflammatory pseudotumor, although overlapping with sarcoma in presentation, age range, and size, does not metastasize and remains histologically distinct from low-grade sarcoma.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11598176     DOI: 10.1038/modpathol.3880434

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mod Pathol        ISSN: 0893-3952            Impact factor:   7.842


  24 in total

1.  Abdominal inflammatory masses mimicking neoplasia in children-experience of two centers.

Authors:  Piotr Czauderna; Klaus Schaarschmidt; Leszek Komasara; Dieter Harms; Michael Lempe; Klaus Vorpahl; Malgorzata Szumera; Alicja Balanda
Journal:  Pediatr Surg Int       Date:  2005-04-07       Impact factor: 1.827

2.  Laparoscopic excision of an inflammatory myofibroblastic tumour of the bladder disguised as deep infiltrating endometriosis.

Authors:  Ourania Koukoura; Zoi Alevra; Kitty Pavlakis; George Pistofidis
Journal:  BMJ Case Rep       Date:  2017-07-14

3.  Inflammatory pseudotumor of the urinary bladder.

Authors:  Elsa Rosado; José Pereira; Florence Corbusier; Pieter Demeter; Maria Antonietta Bali
Journal:  J Radiol Case Rep       Date:  2015-01-31

4.  Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor of the urinary bladder managed by laparoscopic partial cystectomy.

Authors:  Manas Ranjan Pradhan; Priyadarshi Ranjan; Ram Nawal Rao; Saurabh Sudhir Chipde; Krishna Pradhan; Rakesh Kapoor
Journal:  Korean J Urol       Date:  2013-11-06

5.  Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumour of the bladder: Case report and review of the literature.

Authors:  Li Wei; Liang Jianbo; Wei Qiang; Yu Hai; Lan Zhixiang
Journal:  Can Urol Assoc J       Date:  2013 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 1.862

6.  Pseudosarcomatous myofibroblastic tumour of the urinary bladder: a case report.

Authors:  K Chandramouleeswari; S Anita; B Shivali
Journal:  J Clin Diagn Res       Date:  2012-10

7.  Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor of the urinary bladder diagnosed by anaplastic lymphoma kinase immunostaining.

Authors:  Ram Nawal Rao; Priydarshi Ranjan; Nidhi Singla; Rakesh Pandey
Journal:  Urol Ann       Date:  2012-05

8.  Successful treatment and follow-up of a case of recurrent pseudosarcomatous myofibroblastic proliferation.

Authors:  Jun H Lei; Lu Yang; Liang R Liu; Qiang Wei
Journal:  Saudi Med J       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 1.484

9.  Recurrence of inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor in bladder secondary to prostate treated with laparoscopic radical cystectomy.

Authors:  Hui-hui Zhang; Fan Qi; Xiong-bing Zu; Liang Xu; Long-fei Liu; Lin Qi
Journal:  Med Sci Monit       Date:  2012-08

10.  Pseudosarcomatous myofibroblastic lesion of the urinary bladder: a rare entity posing a diagnostic challenge and therapeutic dilemma.

Authors:  Alexandros Lekas; Aikaterini Parasi; Thomas G Papathomas; Athanasios G Papatsoris; Maria Rozaria Mennonna; Michail Chrisofos; Charalambos Deliveliotis; Andreas C Lazaris
Journal:  Diagn Pathol       Date:  2008-03-13       Impact factor: 2.644

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.