| Literature DB >> 34287076 |
Saleh Fadel1, Patrick J Villeneuve1, Ashish Gupta1, Sarah Strickland1, Marcio Gomes1.
Abstract
Primary biphasic tumors of the lung are rare. Lung lesions with a biphasic pattern are far more commonly primary or metastatic soft tissue tumors with entrapped native respiratory epithelium, giving the false impression of a biphasic tumor. We report a case of bilateral benign metastasizing leiomyomas in a 69-year-old female where the tumor cells diffusely entrapped native respiratory glands in a phyllodes-like pattern. The radiographic characteristics and histologic appearance were not immediately diagnostic and covered a wide differential. Reaching the final diagnosis required the use of immunohistochemical studies as well as correlation with the patient's history and radiographic findings. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of pulmonary benign metastasizing leiomyoma presenting in a phyllodes-like pattern. This case illustrates the importance of considering entrapment of native lung epithelium in the differential diagnosis of biphasic-appearing lung tumors.Entities:
Keywords: benign metastasizing leiomyoma; biphasic tumors of the lung; mimics of lung tumors; pulmonary tumors
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34287076 PMCID: PMC8899804 DOI: 10.1177/10668969211035059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Surg Pathol ISSN: 1066-8969 Impact factor: 1.271
Figure 1.Computed tomography (CT) images in axial plane in lung window (A and B) show well defined, smooth outline solid left lower lobe nodule (short arrow) and right lower lobe lung mass (long arrow). On mediastinal windows (C), the right lower lung mass (arrowhead) shows slight heterogeneity and enhancement.
Figure 2.Gross image of the left lower lobe lesion, showing a round well-circumscribed white nodule compressing adjacent native structures. This was identical to the previously resected lesion from the right lower lobe.
Figure 3.Representative images of the lesion from one histological section showing diffuse lung epithelium entrapment (A-D) and the results of select immunohistochemical studies (E-H). (A) Phyllodes-like pattern, (B) adenofibroma-like pattern, (C) a high power image of an entrapped respiratory gland with hypercellular stroma containing short spindle cells surrounding the epithelial gland, (D) the classic leiomyoma-like pattern, (E) smooth muscle actin expression in the spindle cell component, (F) elevated Ki-67 expression in the periglandular spindle cell area, (G) CD34 expression in the periglandular spindle cells, and (H) CD10 expression in the periglandular spindle cells.