| Literature DB >> 25126005 |
Suvi Lokka1, Andreas H Scheel1,2, Sebastian Dango3,4, Katja Schmitz2, Rudolf Hesterberg3, Josef Rüschoff1, Hans-Ulrich Schildhaus2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Liposarcoma is the most frequent soft tissue sarcoma. Well differentiated liposarcoma may progress into dedifferentiated liposarcoma with pleomorphic histology. A minority additionally features myogenic, osteo- or chondrosarcomatous heterologous differentiation. Genomic amplification of the Mouse double minute 2 homolog (MDM2) locus is characteristic for well differentiated and dedifferentiated liposarcomas. Detection of MDM2 amplification may supplement histopathology and aid to distinguish liposarcoma from other soft tissue neoplasia. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Dedifferentiated Liposarcoma; Fluorescence in situ hybridisation; Liposarcoma with osteoblastic component; MDM2
Year: 2014 PMID: 25126005 PMCID: PMC4132276 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6890-14-36
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Clin Pathol ISSN: 1472-6890
Benign and malignant lipomatous tumors as listed by the current WHO-definition and -status
| Lipoma | Benign | 8850/0 | no |
| Lipoblastoma | Benign | 8851/0 | no |
| Angiolipoma | Benign | 8861/0 | no |
| Myolipoma | Benign | 8890/0 | no |
| Chondroid lipoma | Benign | 8862/0 | no |
| Spindle cell lipoma | Benign | 8854/0 | no |
| Pleomorphic lipoma | Benign | 8854/0 | no |
| Hibernoma | Benign | 8880/0 | no |
| Well differentiated liposarcoma/atypical lipomatous tumor | Intermediate, locally aggressive | 8851/1 | yes |
| Dedifferentiated liposarcoma | Malignant | 8858/3 | yes |
| Myxoid liposacroma | Malignant | 8852/3 | no |
| Pleomorphic liposarcoma | Malignant | 8854/3 | no |
Figure 1Clinical presentation of Case #1: Preoperative CT-scan (A) of the tumour in the lower left abdominal wall. Macroscopic presentation of the surgical specimen (B); central parts of the tumour are well delimited ('core'); the path of the primary laparoscopy is visible. The tumour infiltrated the abdominal skeletal muscles but did not extra into the abdominal cavity.
Figure 2Histopathology of Case #1: The tumour shows patches of higher differentiated atypical lipomatous tissue (A) but mostly displays only poorly differentiated spindle-shaped cells (B). Prominent areas with myofibroblastic morphology were noticed (C) and immunohistochemistry was positive for Desmin (D) and Actin.
Figure 3Molecular hallmarks of Case #1: Immunohistochemistry demonstrates co-overexpression of CDK4 (B) and MDM2 (C) in both the poorly and higher differentiated areas (A: HE-staining of corresponding region). Fluorescence in situ hybridisation shows strong amplification of the MDM2 locus as underlying genetic alteration (D; Green: MDM2 probe, Red: Chromosome 12 reference probe). The features are characteristic of dedifferentiated liposarcoma.
Figure 4Histopathology and molecular hallmarks of Case #2: The tumour showed heterogeneous morphology. Most cells were spindle-shaped but giant cells with segmented nuclei were also present. Focally, transitions into higher differentiated lipomatous tissue were noticed (A). Other areas were of osteoblastic/osteosarcomatous (B) and fibrosarcomatous appearance (C). Fluorescence in situ hybridisation of the MDM2 gene revealed highly amplified clusters in the lipomatous (D, left), fibrosarcomatous and the osteosarcomatous regions (D, right).