2.Diagnosis and surgical treatment of sinonasal phosphaturic mesenchymal tumor.
Ru TANG ; Shi Xian LIU ; Song MAO ; Wei Tian ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2021;56(4):351-355
Objective: To investigate the diagnosis and surgical treatment of sinonasal phosphaturic mesenchymal tumor (PMT). Methods: The medical records of nine patients who had been diagnosed as sinonasal PMT in Department of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, Shanghai JiaoTong University Affiliated Sixth People's Hospital between January 2015 and May 2020 were collected, including 4 males and 5 females, ranging from 36 to 59 years. The patient's previous history, clinical manifestations, imaging findings, laboratory results, surgical procedure, pathological results and postoperative follow-up data were analyzed by descriptive statistical analysis. Results: All patients presented hypophosphatemia and tumor-induced osteomalacia (TIO) with a disease course of 1 to 19 years. The imaging examination and intraoperative findings identified two cases with peripheral tissue infiltration, two cases with contralateral nasal cavity invasion, and one case with intracranial invasion. Five patients underwent unilateral endoscopic resection while two patients underwent bilateral endoscopic resection, and the remaining two patients underwent unilateral transorbital ethmoid artery ligation plus endoscopic tumor resection and endoscopic combined with transfrontal tumor resection (n=1 each). Expect for one case developed recurrence and intracranial involvement, the other patients achieved clinical remission and no recurrence was observed during the six-month follow-up. Conclusions: The diagnosis of sinonasal PMT needs combination of clinical manifestation, imaging, and pathological findings. Complete surgical excision and long-term postoperative follow-up are imperative.
China
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Female
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Humans
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Hypophosphatemia
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Male
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Mesenchymoma/surgery*
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Neoplasm Recurrence, Local
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Neoplasms, Connective Tissue/surgery*
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Retrospective Studies
3.Tumor-induced osteomalacia with elevated fibroblast growth factor 23: a case of phosphaturic mesenchymal tumor mixed with connective tissue variants and review of the literature.
Fang-Ke HU ; Fang YUAN ; Cheng-Ying JIANG ; Da-Wei LV ; Bei-Bei MAO ; Qiang ZHANG ; Zeng-Qiang YUAN ; Yan WANG
Chinese Journal of Cancer 2011;30(11):794-804
Tumor-induced osteomalacia (TIO), or oncogenic osteomalacia (OOM), is a rare acquired paraneoplastic disease characterized by renal phosphate wasting and hypophosphatemia. Recent evidence shows that tumor-overexpressed fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) is responsible for the hypophosphatemia and osteomalacia. The tumors associated with TIO are usually phosphaturic mesenchymal tumor mixed connective tissue variants (PMTMCT). Surgical removal of the responsible tumors is clinically essential for the treatment of TIO. However, identifying the responsible tumors is often difficult. Here, we report a case of a TIO patient with elevated serum FGF23 levels suffering from bone pain and hypophosphatemia for more than three years. A tumor was finally located in first metacarpal bone by octreotide scintigraphy and she was cured by surgery. After complete excision of the tumor, serum FGF23 levels rapidly decreased, dropping to 54.7% of the preoperative level one hour after surgery and eventually to a little below normal. The patient's serum phosphate level rapidly improved and returned to normal level in four days. Accordingly, her clinical symptoms were greatly improved within one month after surgery. There was no sign of tumor recurrence during an 18-month period of follow-up. According to pathology, the tumor was originally diagnosed as "lomangioma" based upon a biopsy sample, "proliferative giant cell tumor of tendon sheath" based upon sections of tumor, and finally diagnosed as PMTMCT by consultation one year after surgery. In conclusion, although an extremely rare disease, clinicians and pathologists should be aware of the existence of TIO and PMTMCT, respectively.
Bone Neoplasms
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blood
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complications
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diagnostic imaging
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pathology
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surgery
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Female
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Fibroblast Growth Factors
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blood
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Follow-Up Studies
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Humans
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Hypophosphatemia
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blood
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diagnostic imaging
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etiology
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pathology
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surgery
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Mesenchymoma
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blood
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complications
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diagnostic imaging
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pathology
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surgery
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Metacarpal Bones
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Middle Aged
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Neoplasms, Connective Tissue
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blood
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complications
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diagnostic imaging
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pathology
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surgery
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Osteomalacia
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blood
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diagnostic imaging
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etiology
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pathology
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surgery
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Phosphates
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blood
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Radiography
4.Extraskeletal myxoid chondrosarcoma: a report of 5 cases and review of literature.
Hong XU ; Changwei YANG ; Yingmei WANG ; Shoujing YANG
Chinese Journal of Pathology 2014;43(1):30-33
OBJECTIVETo study the clinicopathologic features, immunophenotype and differential diagnosis of extraskeletal myxoid chondrosarcoma (EMC).
METHODSThe clinicopathologic features of 5 cases of EMC (during the period from 2008 to 2013) were retrospectively analyzed. Immunohistochemical study (EnVision method) was carried out using the archival material. The literature was reviewed.
RESULTSThere were altogether 3 female patients and 2 male patients. Their age ranged from 38 to 63 years (average = 51 years). The patients primarily presented with a tender soft tissue mass. All the tumors studied were solitary and the duration of disease onset varied from 3 months to 1 year. The sites of involvement included toe (number = 2), intracranial (number = 1), thigh (number = 1) and shoulder (number = 1). Gross examination showed white nodular masses with a gelatinous cut surface. The average tumor size measured 5.2 cm in greatest dimension. Histologically, a multinodular architecture with fibrous or loose fibrovascular septa separating lobules of tumor cells was identified. The lobules contained abundant myxoid stroma, with peripheral accentuation of tumor cellularity. Two cases were diagnosed as cellular variant of EMC, with invasive growth pattern and hemorrhage. The tumor cells in cellular EMC were arranged in solid nodules, with rare myxoid matrix in between. The nuclei were relatively uniform, round to oval and contained prominent nucleoli. The mitotic figure ranged from 5 to 10 per 10 high-power fields. Immunohistochemical study showed that all of the 5 cases were positive for vimentin, mitochondria and CD56. Two cases expressed synaptophysin and NSE. Focal positivity for these neuroendocrine markers was detected in the other 2 cases. Chromogranin and S-100 protein expression was demonstrated in 2 cases. The staining for epithelial membrane antigen was positive in case 2 and negative in the other 4 cases. CD117 showed diffuse positivity in case 1, the other 4 cases were not expressed.
CONCLUSIONSEMC is a rare soft tissue sarcoma characterized by distinctive histopathologic features and often shows neuroendocrine differentiation. Although EMC is a slow-growing tumor, it carries a high local recurrence rate and even metastases, warranting long-term follow up.
Adult ; CD56 Antigen ; metabolism ; Chondrosarcoma ; metabolism ; pathology ; surgery ; Chordoma ; metabolism ; pathology ; Chromogranins ; metabolism ; Diagnosis, Differential ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Neoplasms, Connective and Soft Tissue ; metabolism ; pathology ; surgery ; Phosphopyruvate Hydratase ; metabolism ; Retrospective Studies ; Rhabdomyosarcoma ; metabolism ; pathology ; S100 Proteins ; metabolism ; Shoulder ; Synaptophysin ; metabolism ; Thigh ; Toes ; Vimentin ; metabolism