| Literature DB >> 25364404 |
Yan Liu1, Bin Hu2, Jing-Xia Li3, Lu-Qi Xing4, Bao-Ping Liu5.
Abstract
Retroperitoneal extraskeletal osteosarcoma (ESOS) is a rare and highly invasive tumor that is usually diagnosed at an advanced stage due to the insidious onset. The present study analyses a case of retroperitoneal ESOS and its clinical, radiological and therapeutic conditions, and also provides a review of the literature. A 52-year-old male was diagnosed with retroperitoneal ESOS. The patient succumbed to the condition one year after the initial surgery. During treatment, the patient underwent two additional surgeries and two courses of chemotherapy. In the present case, a peritoneal metastatic lesion of ESOS was shed from the peritoneum and implanted into the outer membrane of the stomach and metastasis was identified, this has rarely been reported in the literature. Retroperitoneal ESOS should be considered in the differential diagnosis of a retroperitoneal mass in order to facilitate the management of surgery and help determine the appropriate treatment of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: implantation metastasis; retroperitoneal extraskeletal osteosarcoma; therapy
Year: 2014 PMID: 25364404 PMCID: PMC4214496 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2014.2602
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1Representative abdominal computed tomography (CT) findings (A) prior to and (B and C) following the first surgery. (A) Prior to the first surgery, abdominal CT showed a large dense mass with calcification (arrowhead) located below the right kidney. (B) Two months after the first surgery, CT demonstrated a mass (arrowhead), with a large calcified lesion, anterior to the right psoas muscle. The renal fascia and abdominal wall showed multiple calcified foci (arrow). (C) Nine months after the first surgery, CT revealed calcified lesions (arrow) in the outer stomach anterior wall and hepatic surface.
Figure 2Representative images of hematoxylin and eosin staining. (A) Histological appearance of the first surgical mass specimen. The tumor was composed of spindle- and polygonal-shaped tumor cells, with a banded or irregular osteoid matrix. The tumor cells exhibited varying degrees of atypia, and visible mitotic figures were present (magnification, ×200). (B) Histological appearance of the third surgical gastric specimen. Osteosarcoma components were visible in the outer membrane of the stomach wall (magnification, ×400).
Reported cases of retroperitoneal ESOS.
| Case no. | Gender/age, years | Location | Symptoms of tumor compression | Tumor calcification | Tumor size, cm | Surrounding invasion | Therapy | Reference no. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Female/66 | Right iliac fossa | Bilateral hydronephrosis | Calcification | NA | Invasion | Chemotherapy | ( |
| 2 | Female/67 | Inferior left renal | Left Ureter Obstruction | Calcification | 17 | Invasion | Surgery | ( |
| 3 | Female/74 | Above left renal | Null | Calcification | 16 | Invasion | Interventional therapy and chemotherapy | ( |
| 4 | Female/74 | Right renal region | Null | Calcification | NA | Invasion | N/A | ( |
| 5 | Male/80 | Peripheral right renal | N/A | Calcification | 10 | Invasion | Surgery | ( |
| 6 | Female/62 | Rright renal region | Null | Calcification | 14 | Invasion | Surgery | ( |
| 7 | Male/58 | Anterior left renal | Null | Calcification | 6.5 | Invasion | Chemotherapy | ( |
| 8 | Male/68 | Inferior right renal | N/A | Calcification | 19 | NA | N/A | ( |
| 9 | Male/66 | NA | N/A | Calcification | NA | Invasion | Surgery | ( |
| 10 | Male/52 | Inferior right renal | Right kidney hydronephrosis | Calcification | 6 | Invasion | Surgery and chemotherapy | Present case |
NA, not available; ESOS, extraskeletal osteosarcoma.
Details of the three surgeries performed on the patient with retroperitoneal ESOS.
| Surgical details | First surgery | Second surgery | Third surgery |
|---|---|---|---|
| Date of surgery | March 06, 2012 | July 18, 2012 | Dec 24, 2012 |
| Pre-operative diagnosis | Right hydronephrosis | Right abdominal tumor recurrence | Incomplete intestinal obstruction |
| Surgical aim | Surgery on right kidney hydronephrosis | Cytoreductive surgery | Relief of intestinal obstruction |
| Intraoperative findings | Retroperitoneal mass below the right kidney and oppressing the ureter | Retroperitoneal mass closely adherent to the right kidney, ileocecum and posterior abdominal wall | Right retroperitoneal mass oppressing the descending section of the duodenum and surrounding the descending colon |
| Tumor size, cm2 | 8v8 | 10×12 | 25×30 |
| Gross appearance | A stiff, calcified, immobile retroperitoneal mass with a wide base | A stiff, calcified, immobile retroperitoneal mass with a wide base | A stiff, calcified, immobile retroperitoneal mass with a wide base |
| Relapse or distant transfer of disease | Non-metastasis | Intraperitoneal and abdominal wall metastases | New metastasis of the gastric wall outer membrane |
| Intraoperative treatment | Partial resection of right peritoneal tumor | Only omental metastases were cut | Gastrojejunostomy and ileocolonic anastomosis |
| Post-operative pathology | Retroperitoneal ESOS | Omental osteosarcoma metastasis | Gastric wall outer membrane osteosarcoma metastasis |
ESOS, extraskeletal osteosarcoma.