Use of Electron Microscopy to Classify Canine Perivascular Wall Tumors

Author:

Palmieri C.12,Avallone G.3,Cimini M.1,Roccabianca P.3,Stefanello D.4,Salda L. Della1

Affiliation:

1. Veterinary Pathology Division, Department of Comparative Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Teramo, Italy

2. Current affiliation: School of Veterinary Science, University of Queensland, Australia

3. DiPAV-Veterinary and Avian Pathology Division, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Milan, Milan, Italy

4. Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Milan, Milan, Italy

Abstract

The histologic classification of canine perivascular wall tumors (PWTs) is controversial. Many PWTs are still classified as hemangiopericytomas (HEPs), and the distinction from peripheral nerve sheath tumors (PNSTs) is still under debate. A recent histologic classification of canine soft tissue sarcomas included most histologic types of PWT but omitted those that were termed undifferentiated. Twelve cases of undifferentiated canine PWTs were evaluated by transmission electron microscopy. The ultrastructural findings supported a perivascular wall origin for all cases with 4 categories of differentiation: myopericytic (n = 4), myofibroblastic (n = 1), fibroblastic (n = 2), and undifferentiated (n = 5). A PNST was considered unlikely in each case based on immunohistochemical expression of desmin and/or the lack of typical ultrastructural features, such as basal lamina. Electron microscopy was pivotal for the subclassification of canine PWTs, and the results support the hypothesis that canine PWTs represent a continuum paralleling the phenotypic plasticity of vascular mural cells. The hypothesis that a subgroup of PWTs could arise from a pluripotent mesenchymal perivascular wall cell was also considered and may explain the diverse differentiation of canine PWTs.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Veterinary

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