| Literature DB >> 2544508 |
P E Wakely1, R I Sprague, M J Kornstein.
Abstract
During a review of Wilms' tumor, four located external to the kidney were identified. Patient age ranged from 7 months to 4 years; three were female. One neoplasm was located in the parametrial connective tissue to the left of the uterus; both kidneys were radiographically normal. Three neoplasms were located in the right retroperitoneum adherent to the surface of the ipsilateral kidney, but separated from the parenchyma by a thick fibrous capsule. Two were attached to the upper pole, while the third was attached to the midportion of the kidney. Radiologic studies showed displacement of all three kidneys, but intravenous pyelogram (IVP) revealed no calyceal distortion. All four neoplasms were favorable histology Wilms' tumor: one was monophasic epithelial type, one was monophasic blastemal type, and two had a mixture of stromal, epithelial, and blastemal tissue. No teratomatous elements were present. Immunoperoxidase staining for cytokeratin (AE-1, AE-3, CAM 5.2), vimentin, and epithelial membrane antigen (EMA) showed the strongest focal positive staining of tubular structures with CAM 5.2, and slight staining with EMA. Staining reaction to vimentin was variable, but negative in most areas. Three tumors extracted from paraffin were diploid by quantitative flow cytometric DNA analysis; in one case, flow cytometry could not be performed. Clinical follow-up from 2 years to 6 years showed all children to be alive without evidence of disease. Based on the similarity to conventional renal Wilms' tumor, these findings support the hypothesis of displaced mesonephric/metanephric rests for the origin of extrarenal Wilms' tumor.Entities:
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Year: 1989 PMID: 2544508 DOI: 10.1016/0046-8177(89)90157-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Pathol ISSN: 0046-8177 Impact factor: 3.466