| Literature DB >> 35676721 |
Tobias M Ballhause1, Sebastian Weiss2, Alonja Reiter2, Karl-Heinz Frosch2,3, Andreas M Luebke4, Peter Bannas5, Carsten W Schlickewei2, Matthias H Priemel2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: According to guidelines, every soft tissue tumor (STT) larger than 3 cm should be biopsied before definitive resection. Advances in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) improve the possibility to give a provisional diagnosis of the tumor's entity. Can lipomas and atypical lipomatous tumors (ALTs) of the extremities therefore be primarily marginally resected based on interpretation of MR images without a previous biopsy?.Entities:
Keywords: Atypical lipomatous tumor; Lipomatous tumors; Liposarcoma; Sarcoma; Soft tissue tumors
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35676721 PMCID: PMC9178814 DOI: 10.1186/s12957-022-02665-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Surg Oncol ISSN: 1477-7819 Impact factor: 3.253
Fig. 1Examples for lipomatous tumors in MRI. A Lipoma in a T1-weighted sequence in transversal plane. B Corresponding T2-weighted coronal image. C Atypical lipomatous tumor (ALT) in a contrast-enhanced fat-saturated T1-weighed sequence in transversal plane demonstrating inhomogeneous contrast enhancement. D Corresponding T2-weighted coronal image. E Pleomorphic liposarcoma in a T1-weighted-sequence in axial plane. F Corresponding T2-weighted coronal image
Fig. 2Histologic images of lipomatous tumors. A The image shows the characteristic histology of lipoma: a homogeneous proliferation of mature adipocytes without cellular atypia. B The adipocytic (lipoma-like) type of atypical lipomatous tumor (ALT) consists of adipocytes with variation in size and shape and a typical component of stromal spindle cells with hyperchromatic atypical nuclei. C Liposarcomas with low-grade dedifferentiation are rare but recognized increasingly. The tumor frequently shows dense proliferation of uniform spindle cells with mild nuclear atypia arranged in a fascicular pattern. D The dedifferentiated areas of high-grade dedifferentiated liposarcoma usually resemble undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma or myxofibrosarcoma. However, any type of high-grade sarcoma can be present. The actual image shows high-grade spindle cell sarcoma with features of fibrosarcoma. All images are in hematoxylin and eosin stain. The black bar indicates 100 μm
Fig. 3Inclusion criteria. The flow chart depicts the inclusion process of the study and the demographic data of the collectivity
Histologic diagnoses of the primarily resected lesions. In total, 142 tumors were treated with primarily marginal resection. The table depicts the final histopathologic diagnosis of all resected specimens
| Malignancy | Entity | |
|---|---|---|
| Benign | Lipoma | 109 (76.8%) |
| Spindle cell lipoma | 1 (0.7%) | |
| Angiolipoma | 4 (2.8%) | |
| Fibrolipoma | 2 (1.4%) | |
| Locally aggressive, not metastasizing | ALT | 25 (17.6%) |
| Malignant | Myxoid LPS | 1 (0.7%) |
Fig. 4The anatomical distribution of the tumors was almost equal, but biopsies are favored in the upper extremity
Histologic diagnoses of the primarily biopsied lesions. No differences were observed in the histopathologic diagnosis from the incision biopsy in comparison with the analysis of the complete resected specimen
| Malignancy | Entity | n |
|---|---|---|
| Benign | Lipoma | 7 (7.1%) |
| Spindle cell lipoma | 2 (2.0%) | |
| Angiolipoma | 2 (2.0%) | |
| Fibrolipoma | 3 (3.1%) | |
| Hibernoma | 2 (2.0%) | |
| Lipoma arborescens | 1 (1.0%) | |
| Locally aggressive, not metastasizing | ALT | 14 (14.3%) |
| Malignant | Myxoid LPS | 35 (35.8%) |
| Pleomorphic LPS | 24 (24.6%) | |
| Dedifferentiated LPS | 6 (6.1%) | |
| Not-other specified LPS | 2 (2.0%) |
Fig. 5A Average tumor volume measured on MRI scans. B Average tumor volume of atypical lipomatous tumors (ALT). PMR, primarily marginal resection of the tumor; *indicates significant differences with p < 0.046; ns, not significant