Plexiform fibromyxoma with cotyledon-like serosal growth: A case report of a rare gastric tumor and review of the literature.
Mots clés
Abstrait
Plexiform fibromyxoma is a rare, benign mesenchymal neoplasm that predilects the gastric antrum and has potential for misdiagnosis as a gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST). The histology of the tumor is characterized by interwoven fascicular growth of cytologically bland spindled cells within a variably myxoid stroma. The current study reports the clinicopathological and immunohistochemical findings of a plexiform fibromyxoma resected from a 28-year-old Vietnamese female. The patient presented with acute, severe abdominal pain and worsening anemia. The initial fine-needle aspiration and needle core biopsy of the gastric antral mass led to an initial diagnosis of GIST. The subsequent distal partial gastrectomy revealed a 5.5-cm transmural antral mass that ulcerated the overlying mucosa and grew as variably elongated, myxoedematous, polypoid (cotyledon-like) excrescences from the serosal surface. Microscopically, the tumor demonstrated plexiform and multinodular growth of cytologically bland spindled cells proliferating in an abundant myxocollagenous stroma with a prominent capillary network. Tumor cells immunohistochemically expressed smooth muscle actin and CD10, but did not express CD117, Discovered on GIST-1 or nuclear β-catenin. Follow-up evaluation 23 months post surgery revealed no evidence of residual tumor. A review the cases of this rare entity reported in the English language literature is also provided.