| Literature DB >> 26697249 |
Pamidimukkala Bramhananda Rao1, Saptarshi Ghosh1, Manisha Mohapatra2, N Pramod Philip3, P Ravindra Kumar1, Surendra Manam1, Pradeep Karra1, Vijay Krishna Jasti1.
Abstract
Introduction. Syringocystadenocarcinoma papilliferum (SCACP) is an extremely rare malignant adnexal tumor, which arises from syringocystadenoma papilliferum. To date, less than 30 cases of malignant SCACP have been reported, of which locoregional metastases were found in only four cases. Case Report. A 57-year-old female patient who presented to our Oncology Department with a recurrent malignant SCACP of the left labia along with right inguinal lymphadenopathy. Pathological examination confirmed the diagnosis of malignant SCACP with right inguinal lymph node metastases. Due to the fixity of the right inguinal nodes, neoadjuvant chemotherapy was administered with Cisplatin and 5-Fluorouracil for four cycles, following which the primary tumor and the contralateral inguinal nodes regressed completely. Then definitive chemoradiation was delivered with five cycles of weekly Cisplatin and external beam pelvic irradiation up to a dose of 59.4 Gy. Patient is disease-free 11 months after treatment. Discussion. We here report the fifth case of malignant SCACP with locoregional metastases. This is the first case of malignant SCACP which has been treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by concurrent chemoradiation. Although surgery has been used most commonly, chemoradiation may also have a role in the treatment of malignant SCACP, especially in cases of locoregional metastases.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26697249 PMCID: PMC4677189 DOI: 10.1155/2015/638294
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Oncol Med
Figure 1(a) Photomicrograph of the tumor showing epidermis and dermis along with a tumor arranged in tubules, nests, and islands invading into the deeper tissue (H&E, ×100). (b) Photomicrograph showing the tumor arranged in complex papillary fronds having central fibrovascular core; surrounding stroma shows dense lymphocytic infiltration (H&E, ×100). (c) Photomicrograph showing papillae lined by multilayered round to columnar cells showing mild to moderate nuclear atypia, with vesicular chromatin and some showed prominent nucleoli (H&E, ×400).
Figure 2FNA cytosmears from inguinal lymph node showing round to oval tumor cells arranged in papillary structures; background shows many lymphocytes and eosinophilic proteinaceous material (Leishman, ×100).
Figure 3(a) Pretreatment sagittal magnetic resonance (MR) image depicting the superficial inguinal lymph nodal mass measuring 5.3 cm × 7.5 cm in size. (b) Pretreatment axial MR image showing the primary vulvar lesion and the right superficial inguinal lymph nodal mass.
Figure 4((a) and (b)) Posttreatment MR images in sagittal and axial section show complete resolution of the inguinal lymph nodes.