Pleomorphic Hyalinizing Angiectatic Tumor of Soft Parts

Abstract
Fourteen examples of an unusual mesenchymal tumor characterized by sheets and fascicles of mitotically inactive, hemosiderin-stippled, spindled, and pleomorphic cells, situated around an angiectatic vasculature, are described. The 14 tumours developed in eight women and six men (aged 32-83 years) and ranged in size from 2.3 to 8 cm. Eleven cases presented in the subcutaneous tissues, of which eight were located in the lower extremity. All featured prominent clusters of thin-walled ectatic vessels surrounded by perivascular hyaline material representing a combination of fibrin and collagen. In three cases the perivascular hyalinization was so extensive that it constituted more than half of the total tumor area. The tumor cells were similar to those of malignant fibrous hystiocytoma but differed from them by the presence of prominent intranuclear cytoplasmic inclusions, the extreme scarcity of mitotic figures, and the occasional presence of CD-34 expression. These tumors also shared several features with neurilemomas, such as their unusual vasculature, intranuclear cytoplasmic inclusions, lack of mitotic figures, and abundance of mast cells. They could be distinguished from neurilemomas, however, by the usual presence of infiltrative margins and the absence of S-100 protein. Follow-up information on eight patients (6 months to 25 years) indicated recurrences in four cases, with one of the three patients experiencing numerous recurrences over a 25-year period. No patient has developed metastases, however. We suggest that this tumor is a low-grade sarcoma of uncertain lineage in which the vascular changes are, in part, reflective of its slow growth.