| Literature DB >> 24758544 |
Yue He1, Chenping Zhang, Guanglong Liu, Zhuowei Tian, Lizhen Wang, Evagelos Kalfarentzos.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To present the clinical, imaging, pathological and immunohistochemical features of giant cell angiofibroma (GCA). CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24758544 PMCID: PMC4013432 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7819-12-117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 2.754
Figure 1Clinical view of the tumor. (A) Preoperative extraoral clinical view of the patient. (B) Preoperative intraoral view of the patient. (C) Postoperative extraoral clinical view of the patient. (D) Postoperative intraoral clinical view of the patient.
Figure 2Giant cell angiofibroma. (A) Axial T1-weighted MRI of the tumor prior to sclerotherapy. (B) Coronal T1-weighted MRI of the tumor prior to sclerotherapy. (C) Preoperative axial T2-weighted MRI of the tumor after sclerotherapy. (D) Preoperative coronal T1-weighted MRI of the tumor after sclerotherapy. (E) Postoperative axial T1-weighted MRI at six months after resection showing no signs of recurrence. (F) Postoperative coronal T1-weighted MRI at six months after resection showing no signs of recurrence.
Figure 3Histopathological examination. (A) and (B) Microscopic examination revealed a circumscribed, richly vascularized, patternless spindle cell proliferation containing pseudovascular spaces and floret-like multinucleated giant cells (arrow), sometimes lining the pseudovascular spaces, in a variably collagenous or myxoid stroma. (H&Ex400).
Figure 4Immunohistochemical analysis revealed strong positivity for the mesenchymal markers. (A) Vimentin. (B) CD34. (C) CD31. (D) CD99.
Known reported giant cell angiofibroma extraorbital cases
| Subcutaneous neck area | 1 | Cutaneous (thigh) | 1 |
| Occipital region | 2 | Hip | 1 |
| Retroauricular area | 1 | Forearm | 1 |
| Parotid | 1 | Vulva | 1 |
| Submandibular region | 1 | Retroperitoneum | 1 |
| Parapharyngeal space | 1 | Back | 3 |
| Oral buccal mucosa | 3 | Mediastinum | 1 |
| Tongue | 1 | Axilla | 1 |
| Vocal cord | 2 | Groin/Inguinal region | 3 |
Source: References [2-18].
Summary of World Health Organization (WHO) classification of soft tissue tumors of the neck
| Adipocytic | Lipoma and its variants (lipoblastoma, hibernoma, lipomatosis) | Atypical lipomatous tumor, well-differentiated liposarcoma | … | Liposarcoma |
| Fibroblastic/myofibroblastic | Fibromatosis colli, myofibroma, giant cell angiofibroma | Desmoid-type fibromatosis | Solitary fibrous tumor hemangio-pericytoma, inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor (inflammatory pseudotumor) | Fibrosarcoma |
| So-called fibrohistiocytic | Benign fibrous histiocytoma, diffuse-type giant cell tumor (pigmented villonodular synovitis) | … | Giant cell tumor of soft tissues | Malignant fibrous histiocytoma (undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma) |
| Skeletal muscle | Rhabdomyoma | … | … | Rhabdomyosarcoma |
| Smooth muscle | Leiomyoma, angioleiomyoma | … | … | Leiomyosarcoma |
| Vascular | Hemangioma, lymphangioma | Kaposiform hemangioendothelioma | Kaposi sarcoma | Angiosarcoma |
| Perivascular | Glomus tumor, myopericytoma | … | … | Malignant glomus tumor |
| Chondro-osseous | Soft tissue chondroma | … | … | Mesenchymal chondrosarcoma, extraskeletal osteosarcoma |
| Uncertain differentiation | Myxoma | … | Ossifying fibro-myxoid tumor | Synovial sarcoma, alveolar soft part sarcoma, primitive neuroectodermal tumor, Ewing sarcoma |
Source- Reference [19].