Imprint Cytology of Hepatic Angiomyolipoma -A Case Report (original) (raw)
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Hepatic angiomyolipoma: a series of six cases with
2012
Hepatic angiomyolipoma is rare and may pose differential diagnostic difficulty, particularly if encountered in core needle biopsy. We studied 6 cases from 5 males and one female (median age, 48.6 yrs). All presented with non-specific symptoms or an incidentally discovered tumor mass. Two patients had a remote history of chemotherapy for hematological neoplasms (acute lymphoblastic leukemia and Hodgkin lymphoma respectively) and another had clear cell renal cell carcinoma and anaplastic pancreatic carcinoma diagnosed at autopsy without definable syndrome. None of the patients had evidence of the tuberous sclerosis complex or renal or other extra-renal angiomyolipoma. Three tumors were resected completely and three have been only biopsied and followed up. None of the resected cases recurred at a mean follow-up of 35 months. Histologically, tumors were classified as classical triphasic (1), lipomatous (2), epithelioid/oncocytoid (1), epithelioid trabecular (1) and myelolipoma-like (1). The adjacent liver parenchyma was normal in 3 cases, showed pigment cirrhosis in one case and mild fatty change in another case. One case had clinically diagnosed but histologically unverified cirrhosis. The initial diagnostic impression/ frozen section was misleading in 5 of the cases and included vascular lesion, focal fatty change, myelolipoma, hepatocellular tumor and oncocytic neoplasm. All tumors expressed HMB45 and variably desmin. One epithelioid lesion expressed HMB45 and TFE3, but lacked desmin expression. In conclusion, hepatic angiomyolipomas are increasingly recognized as incidental findings during surveillance for cirrhosis or investigations for unrelated conditions. Awareness of their diverse morphological spectrum in liver biopsy is necessary to avoid misdiagnosis as hepatocellular carcinoma, metastatic melanoma or other malignant neoplasms.
Case report of a hepatic angiomyolipoma
Tumori
Angiomyolipoma (AML) is a benign mesenchymal tumor that has been frequently reported in the kidney but rarely in the liver. Hepatic AML may be clinically, radiologically and morphologically difficult to distinguish from hepatocellular carcinoma or other hepatic lesions, even though the number of cases has been increasing recently due to improved imaging techniques. Histologically it consists of smooth muscle cells, adipose cells and abnormal blood vessels. It is commonly diagnosed following abdominal pain but may also be asymptomatic, has a predominant female predilection, highly variable size and occurs in subjects with a wide age range. The right lobe is the most common site, and multicentricity has been reported. Here we report a case of the myomatous variant of AML, accidentally discovered in a young woman with no clear features on radiographic examination, which was diagnosed by means of fine needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) and then surgically removed. Although careful observat...
Hepatic angiomyolipoma: A case report and literature review
International Journal of Surgery Case Reports, 2020
INTRODUCTION: Hepatic angiomyolipoma (HAML) is a rare mesenchymal liver tumour which belongs to the family of perivascular epithelioid cell tumours (PEComas). It is typically composed of blood vessels, smooth muscle, and adipose cells, and shows strong immunoreactivity for HMB-45. PRESENTATION OF THE CASE: A 57-year-old woman was referred to our hospital with an unclear liver lesion. A fine needle biopsy revealed a suspicion of hepatic angiomyolipoma with extramedullary haematopoiesis. Preoperative imaging revealed a tumour 17 cm in diameter in the left liver lobe segments II and III. A lobectomy of the left lobe segments II and III was performed. The pathological diagnosis of hepatic angiomyolipoma was obtained. DISCUSSION: Variations in the predominance of the tissue components in HAML impedes diagnosis based on imaging alone. The most promising evidence of HAML is the histological identification of lipomatous, myomatous, and angiomatous tissue combined with immunohistochemical positivity for HMB-45. Although the tumour is considered benign, some cases have been described with malignant behaviour. Surgical resection should be considered in case of symptoms, inconclusive biopsy, or growth in follow-up. Other surgical indications may include aggressive patterns such as vascular invasion, p53 immunoreactivity, or rapidly proliferating tumour cells. CONCLUSION: HAML is a rare liver tumour. In patients with symptoms, uncertain diagnosis, or tumour growth, surgical resection should be performed according to oncological criteria.
International journal of clinical and experimental pathology, 2012
Hepatic angiomyolipoma is rare and may pose differential diagnostic difficulty, particularly if encountered in core needle biopsy. We studied 6 cases from 5 males and one female (median age, 48.6 yrs). All presented with non-specific symptoms or an incidentally discovered tumor mass. Two patients had a remote history of chemotherapy for hematological neoplasms (acute lymphoblastic leukemia and Hodgkin lymphoma respectively) and another had clear cell renal cell carcinoma and anaplastic pancreatic carcinoma diagnosed at autopsy without definable syndrome. None of the patients had evidence of the tuberous sclerosis complex or renal or other extra-renal angiomyolipoma. Three tumors were resected completely and three have been only biopsied and followed up. None of the resected cases recurred at a mean follow-up of 35 months. Histologically, tumors were classified as classical triphasic (1), lipomatous (2), epithelioid/oncocytoid (1), epithelioid trabecular (1) and myelolipoma-like (1)....
Clinical Imaging, 2002
Hepatic angiomyolipoma is a rare liver pathology. In this case report, we describe MRI features of a hepatic angiomyolipoma with a high fat content, which was indeterminate on CT. In phase and out of phase T1-weighted spoiled gradient echo technique, T2-weighted fat suppressed fast spin echo technique and dynamic enhanced T1-weighted in phase gradient echo technique were used. Out of phase gradient echo sequence was the most sensitive technique identifying the fat content of the lesion in its mixed tissue composition.