| Literature DB >> 35884764 |
Eshagh Bahrami1, Masoumeh Najafi1, Amin Jahanbakhshi2, Jaber Hatam1, Saadat Molanaei3, Patrizia Ciammella4, Salvatore Cozzi4.
Abstract
Histiocytic sarcoma (HS) is a rare neoplasm composed of cells with immunohistochemical characteristics of mature histiocytes. It can be disseminated or localized and usually involves the skin, spleen, and gastrointestinal tract. Primary involvement of the vertebral column is extremely rare. We report a 29-year-old female who presented with neck pain and had a destructive 35*43*48 mm lesion in C2 with a paravertebral extension. The initial biopsy did not lead to the correct diagnosis. She later developed dysphagia, and the anterior approach was used for tumor decompression. The diagnosis of cervical histiocytic sarcoma was made, and she underwent radiotherapy. The follow-up MRI showed a marked response to radiotherapy. Here, we report the first case of cervical HS, review all cases of vertebral HS, compare patients' characteristics and clinical courses, and discuss diagnostic nuances and treatment options.Entities:
Keywords: histiocytic sarcoma; histocyte; immunohistochemistry; radiotherapy; vertebral column
Year: 2022 PMID: 35884764 PMCID: PMC9321643 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci12070958
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Figure 1Sagitta (a) and axial (b) gadolinium-enhanced MRI showing the tumor in the C2 body.
Figure 2Sagittal (a) and axial (b) gadolinium-enhanced MRI after the progression of the tumor that caused severe dysphagia.
Figure 3Histopathologic examination in regular H&E staining (a), immunostaining for S100 (b) and for CD68 (c).
Figure 4Axial (a) CT scan and MRI (b) and MR angiography (c) showing total occlusion of the right carotid artery along with a lesion in basal ganglia.
Figure 5Post-radiotherapy MRI, sagittal T2W (a), sagittal T1W (b) showing a very good response to treatment.
Figure 6Axial T1W (a), T2W (b), and Gad-Enhanced MRI (c) showing the large cystic mass in the right parietooccipital area together with the old lesion in basal ganglia.
Summary of the main cases published in the literature, with description of the site, histological characteristics, treatment and outcome.
| Author/Year | Age/Sex | Location | IHC | Treatment | Follow-Up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pileri et al. (2002) [ | 26, male | T4, T5 | CD 68, | Radiotherapy and | After 3 years, |
| Kaushal et al. (2012) [ | 17, male | L3 | LCA, vimentin, CD68, CD163, | Surgery + radiotherapy | Disease-free 3.5 years after surgery |
| Lin et al. (2012) [ | 27, female | L3 | Cd68, vimentin, S100 | Surgery (spondylectomy) without adjuvant treatment | No recurrence after 2 years |
| Patnaik et al. (2012) [ | 22, male | T8, T9 | S100, CD38, Lysosyme | Partial excision without adjuvant treatment | Alive after 5 months |
| Buonocore et al. (2005) [ | 3, male | L4, T6 | CD68, focal S100, CD15 | Surgery and radiotherapy just to L4 and chemotherapy, and thereafter, chemoradiotherapy to pulmonary metastases | Two pulmonary nodules developed no change in the T6 lesion |
| Sohn et al. (2010) [ | 63, male | Multiple thoraco lumbar vertebra | CD68, S100 | The patient refused all treatments | Died after 2 months |
| The current case | 29, female | C2 | CD45, CD43, CD68, S100 | Surgery and radiotherapy | Brain metastasis after 9 months |