| Literature DB >> 25506365 |
Laura Stone McGuire1, Danny Yakoub2, Mecker G Möller2, Andrew Rosenberg3, Alan Livingstone2.
Abstract
Malignant granular cell tumors are rare, intensely aggressive entities. This paper presents a case of a large rapidly recurrent malignant granular cell tumor with regional and distal metastases on the back of a 54-year-old Cuban man. The primary tumor recurred within six months of the original wide local excision and with satellite lesions apparent at twelve months, and the mass was diagnosed using the histological criteria established by Fanburg-Smith et al. for malignant granular cell tumors. By fifteen months, right axillary lymphadenopathy, multiple satellite lesions, pulmonary nodules, and distant metastasis in the right thigh were present. At sixteen months, wide local excision of recurrent mass and local satellite masses along with right axillary dissection and placement of Integra with subsequent split-thickness skin graft were performed by surgical oncology and plastic surgery teams. The surgical specimen measured 32.0 × 13.5 × 5.5 cm, containing multiple homogeneous masses with the largest mass 22.0 × 9.0 × 4.6 cm. Following surgery, patient was started on Pazopanib 800 mg/day based on phase III randomized trial data in the treatment of soft tissue sarcomas showing this as a potential novel therapy for malignant granular cell tumors.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25506365 PMCID: PMC4260431 DOI: 10.1155/2014/794648
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Med
Figure 2Preoperative assessment of recurrent malignant granular cell tumor at site of previous surgical excision.
Figure 1(a) High-power magnification of biopsy specimen (5 mitoses per 10 high power field), (b) S-100 immunohistochemistry stain of biopsy specimen, (c) CD68 immunohistochemistry stain of biopsy specimen, and (d) KI-67 proliferation marker of biopsy specimen.
Figure 3Intraoperative picture after wide local excision and right axillary lymph node dissection.
Figure 4Postoperative visit status postsplit-thickness skin graft.