| Literature DB >> 30271265 |
Aoife J McCarthy1, Runjan Chetty1.
Abstract
Leiomyomas of deep soft tissue are extremely rare and should only be diagnosed following adherence to stringent histological criteria, namely, the absence of nuclear atypia and of coagulative tumor necrosis. Whether extremely low counts of, or even any, mitotic activity are acceptable when making a diagnosis of leiomyoma in deep soft tissue sites is controversial. The morphology and immunophenotype of smooth muscle tumors in deep soft tissue are similar to their counterparts irrespective of topography. It is interesting to note that leiomyomas of deep soft tissue (extremity and retroperitoneum) are often hyalinized/sclerosed and calcified. However, the prediction of their behavior and correct codification is dependent on thorough, meticulous search for mitoses and necrosis. Leiomyomas of deep soft tissue in the extremity should be devoid of mitoses and "significant" cytological atypia. An occasional larger, slightly pleomorphic cell in the midst of bland spindle cells, can be regarded as insignificant atypia. If any mitotic activity and several atypical cells are encountered in smooth muscle tumors of deep soft tissue of the extremity, it would be prudent to invoke the appellation of smooth muscle tumor of uncertain malignant potential and advocate wide local excision and follow-up.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30271265 PMCID: PMC6151232 DOI: 10.1155/2018/2071394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sarcoma ISSN: 1357-714X
Figure 1Benign smooth muscle tumor (leiomyoma) of deep somatic soft tissue of the extremity: histologically, an unencapsulated, well-circumscribed, multinodular, low cellularity spindle cell lesion is usually seen (a). The lesional cells are characteristically bland, cigar-shaped spindle cells, with eosinophilic cytoplasm and indistinct cell borders. There is no evidence of mitotic activity, nuclear pleomorphism, or coagulative tumor necrosis (b). Hyalinization and calcification may be present (c). Osseous metaplasia was also seen in this particular case (d).
Summary of case series reporting the clinicopathological features of leiomyomas of deep somatic soft tissue.
| Authors; year of publication | ||
|---|---|---|
| Billings et al.; 2001 [ | Kilpatrick et al.; 1994 [ | |
| Clinical feature | ||
| Age | Middle-aged adults (median, 44 years; range, 12–55 years) | Median, 35 years; range 14–62 years |
| Gender | M = F | M = F |
| Anatomical site | Deep somatic soft tissue of the lower extremity, upper extremity, trunk, axilla, and back | Extremities was the most common site |
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| Histological feature | ||
| Architecture | Well-marginated; fascicular architecture | Well-defined circumscription; fascicular architecture |
| Lesional cells | Mature-appearing smooth muscle cells with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm | Spindle cells with mostly uniform, round-ended, elongated nuclei, and tapering eosinophilic cytoplasm |
| Nuclear atypia | Absent; minimal atypia of a focal nature acceptable | Absent |
| Mitotic count | Absent or very low (≤4 mitoses/50 HPF and ≤1 mitosis/50 HPF in the majority) | ≤1 mitosis/50 HPF |
| Atypical mitotic figures | Absent | Not described |
| Coagulative tumor necrosis | Absent | Absent |
| Other findings | Stromal hyalinization (majority of cases); prominent stromal calcification (some cases); degenerative nuclear changes | Dystrophic calcification (some cases); degenerative nuclear changes (some cases) |
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| IHC | ||
| ER and PR | Negative | Not described |
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| Authors' conclusion | SMTs of somatic soft tissue that lack atypia, necrosis, and mitotic activity can with reasonable confidence be labeled leiomyomas | The presence of any mitoses in SMTs of subcutaneous or deep soft tissue should be regarded as indicative of potential malignancy; WLE and careful F/U advised |
M, male; F, female; HPF, high power fields; IHC, immunohistochemistry; ER, estrogen receptor protein; PR, progesterone receptor protein; SMTs, smooth muscle tumors; WLE, wide local excision; F/U, follow-up. The authors concluded that a smooth muscle tumor of somatic soft tissue with 1–5 mitoses/50 HPF should be regarded as “leiomyoma of uncertain malignant potential.”
Figure 2Immunohistochemistry of a benign smooth muscle tumor (leiomyoma) of deep somatic soft tissue of the extremity: the lesional cells are strongly and diffusely positive for smooth muscle actin (a), desmin (b), and caldesmon (c) and negative for S100 (d) and SOX-10 (not shown).
Summary of a case series reporting the clinicopathological features of leiomyomas of retroperitoneum.
| Authors; year of publication | |
|---|---|
| Billings et al.; 2001 [ | |
| Clinical feature | |
| Age | Often of perimenopausal age (median, 44 years; range 16–72 years) |
| Gender | F >> M |
| Anatomical site | Primarily in the retroperitoneum; also in the mesentery/omentum |
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| Histological feature | |
| Architecture | Intersecting fascicles |
| Lesional cells | Mature smooth muscle cells, with bland, blunt-ended, or slightly tapered nuclei |
| Nuclear atypia | Absent; very focal, minimal atypia acceptable |
| Coagulative tumor cell necrosis | Absent |
| Mitotic activity | Low (mean, 1 mitosis/50 HPF; range, <1–10 mitoses/50 HPF) |
| Atypical mitotic figures | Absent |
| Other findings | Cystic and degenerative changes (more frequent than in counterpart in deep somatic soft tissue) |
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| IHC | |
| ER and PR | Positive |
M, male; F, female; HPF, high power fields; IHC, immunohistochemistry; ER, estrogen receptor protein; PR, progesterone receptor protein. The authors concluded that a smooth muscle tumor of retroperitoneum with >10 mitoses/50 HPF should be regarded as “smooth muscle tumors of uncertain malignant potential.”