Affiliation:
1. Department of Pathology Aristotle University Thessaloniki Greece
2. Department of Pathology Stanford University School of Medicine Stanford California USA
3. Department of Pathology Massachusetts General Hospital Boston Massachusetts USA
4. Surgical Neurology Branch, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke National Institute of Health Bethesda Maryland USA
5. Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center New York New York USA
Abstract
AbstractMyxopapillary ependymoma (MPE) is an uncommon variant of ependymoma, almost exclusively seen in conus medullaris or filum terminale. MPE can be diagnostically challenging, especially when arising extra‐axially. Here we report 5 cases of superficial soft tissue/cutaneous MPE, identified across three tertiary institutions. All patients were female and three of them (3/5, 60%) were children (median age 11 years, range 6–58 years). The tumors presented as slow‐growing masses of the sacrococcygeal subcutaneous soft tissues, occasionally identified after minor trauma and clinically favored to be pilonidal sinuses. Imaging showed no neuraxis connection. Macroscopically, tumors were well‐circumscribed, lobulated, and solid and microscopically they exhibited typical histopathology of MPE, at least focally. Two of the tumors (2/5, 40%) showed predominantly solid or trabecular architecture with greater cellular pleomorphism, scattered giant cells, and increased mitotic activity. All tumors (5/5, 100%) showed strong diffuse immunohistochemical expression of GFAP. One tumor clustered at the category “ependymoma, myxopapillary” by methylome analysis. Two patients (2/5, 40%) had local recurrence at 8 and 30 months after the initial surgery. No patients developed metastases during the follow‐up period (median 60 months, range 6–116 months). Since a subset of extra‐axial MPEs behaves more aggressively, timely and accurate diagnosis is of paramount importance.
Subject
Dermatology,Histology,Pathology and Forensic Medicine