| Literature DB >> 29299229 |
Salvatore Provenzano1, Alessandra Raimondi1, Rossella M Bertulli1, Vittoria Colia1, Salvatore L Renne2, Paola Collini2, Gianpaolo Dagrada2, Dario Callegaro3, Marco Fiore3, Francesca G Greco4, Paolo G Casali1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ossifying fibromyxoid tumor (OFMT) is a rare soft tissue neoplasm of uncertain lineage and intermediate biological potential. It is more common in middle-aged men, usually arising from the deep tissues of the extremities. It is now established that it is a translocation related tumor, most often marked by translocation of PHF1 gene. Surgery is the mainstay of treatment and proves usually curative, although, in rarer cases the disease shows malignant features and tendency to recur both locally and at distant sites. In such cases, no standard treatment exists. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Chemotherapy; Epirubicin; Ifosfamide; Isolated limb perfusion; Ossifying fibromyxoid tumor; Soft tissue sarcoma
Year: 2017 PMID: 29299229 PMCID: PMC5745994 DOI: 10.1186/s13569-017-0086-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Sarcoma Res ISSN: 2045-3329
Fig. 1Axial contrast enhanced T1-weighted MRI. Pathologic tissue in the hypothenar eminence of the right hand, involving the flexor tendons and the spaces between 3rd, 4th and 5th metacarpal bones with intense and homogeneous contrast enhancement (a). Progressive size and contrast enhancement reduction after ILP (b), and chemotherapy (c)
Fig. 2Picture of the patient’s hand. At presentation a the tumor involved widely the hypothenar eminence and medial aspect of the wrist. Seven months after ILP b the nodule in the wrist was hardly palpable while the nodule in the hand was smaller and softer
Fig. 3a Malignant OFMT pre-ILP biopsy, (HE, 40×). Densely packed cords of monomorphic cell with small round nuclei, high mitotic index. b Fluorescent in situ hybridization showing tetraploid cells showing unbalanced PHF1 gene translocation (green 5′). c Malignant OFMT post-ILP and chemotherapy, vital component (HE, 20×). The neoplasm is less densely cellulated and exhibits a variable morphology ranging from more rounded to spindle cell morphology. Mitotic activity is considerably reduced. d Malignant OFMT post-ILP and chemotherapy, non-vital component (HE, 20×). At the bottom of the image, a dense collagen sclerosis with haemosiderin deposition, ghost cells at the upper part, in between cell debris and isolated neoplastic cells with nuclei similarly to the viable component
Fig. 4Coronal contrast enhanced CT scan. A right lung lower lobe metastases (arrow) at baseline (a), increasing after ILP (b), and progressively reducing after 3 (b) and 6 (d) cycles of chemotherapy with epirubicin and ifosfamide
Histopathological and clinical features in published series of patients with OFMT
| Study | Number of patients (total/FU) | Histological subtype (T, A, M) | Median follow-up (months) | Follow-up information | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enzinger et al. [ | 59/41 | N/A | N/A | 11 LR | 3 DoC |
| Folpe et al. [ | 70/51 | N/A | 36 | 9 LR | 41 NED |
| Miettinen et al. [ | 104/41 | N/A | 156 | 9 LR | 32 UNK |
| Graham et al. [ | 46/27 | T = 26 | 55 | 2 LR (M) | 3 DoD |
| Atanaskova Mesinkova et al. [ | 26/16 | T = 8 | 45 | 3 LR (M) | N/A |
| Kossivi Dantey et al. [ | 6/6 | A = 1 | 27 | No events | 1 DoC |
FU follow-up, T typical, A atypical, M malignant, N/A not available, LR Local relapse, DM distant metastasis, DoC dead of other cause, NED not evident disease, ED evident disease, DoD dead of disease, UNK unknown