| Literature DB >> 20169099 |
Barry Rose1, George S Tamvakopoulos, Eric Yeung, Robin Pollock, John Skinner, Timothy Briggs, Steven Cannon.
Abstract
Granular Cell Tumours are rare mesenchymal soft tissue tumours that arise throughout the body and are believed to be of neural origin. They often present as asymptomatic, slow-growing, benign, solitary lesions but may be multifocal. 1-2% of cases are malignant and can metastasise. Described series in the literature are sparse. We identified eleven cases in ten patients treated surgically and followed-up for a period of over 6 years in our regional bone and soft tissue tumour centre. Five tumours were located in the lower limb, four in the upper limb, and two in the trunk. Mean patient age was 31.2 years (range 8-55 years). Excision was complete in one case, marginal in five cases and intralesional in five cases. No patients required postoperative adjuvant treatment. Mean follow-up was 19.3 months (range 1-37 months). One case was multifocal, but there were no cases of local recurrence or malignancy. Histopathological and immunohistochemical analysis revealed the classical granular cell tumour features in all cases. We believe this case series to be the largest of its type in patients presenting to an orthopaedic soft tissue tumour unit. We present our findings and correlate them with findings of other series in the literature.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20169099 PMCID: PMC2821775 DOI: 10.1155/2009/765927
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sarcoma ISSN: 1357-714X
Patient data and histological featuresa.
| Patient | Age | Tumour location | Size in mm (widest diameter) | Depth | Resection Margin (mm) | Atypia | Malignancy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 39 | Thigh | 20 | SC | 1 | N | N |
| 2 | 11 | Calf | 40 | IM | Intralesional | N | N |
| 3 | 30 | Forearm | 20 | SC | Intralesional | N | N |
| 4 | 37 | Arm | U | SC | 1 | N | N |
| 5 | 37 | Calf | 22 | IM | 1 | N | N |
| 6 | 29 | Deltoid | 35 | IM | 1 | N | N |
| 7 | 40 | Thigh | 42 | SC | Intralesional | Y | N |
| 8 | 55 | Thigh | 20 | SC | 7 | N | N |
| 9 | 8 | Finger | 10 | SC | Intralesional | N | N |
| 10a | 26 | Posterior thoracic spine musculature | 130 | IM | Intralesional | N | N |
| 10b | 26 | Supraclavicular | 40 | IM | 1 | Y | N |
U: unrecorded; SC: subcutaneous; IM: intramuscular; Y: Yes; N: No.
apatient 10 presented with distant recurrence.
Figure 1Gross appearance of granular cell tumour. This is an example of multicentric granular cell tumour (case number 10). On the left side (a), the tumour is poorly circumscribed solid and pale yellow, and shows infiltrative growth margin (paraspinal tumour). On the right side (b) the tumour shows better defined pushing margin (supraclavicular tumour).
Figure 2Typical histological appearance of granular cell tumour (a). Sheets of rounded and oval cells with large amount of fine granular eosinophilic cytoplasm. The nuclei are bland and eccentric (20×, H&E stain). Atypical granular cell tumour (b). In comparison with Figure 2(a), there is nuclear pleomorphism, prominent eosinophilic nucleoli, and cell spindling. A mitosis is also present (arrow) (20×, H&E stain).