Abstract

We report two myoepithelial cell neoplasms; a salivary gland tumor was malignant and a breast neoplasm was benign. Both were studied histologically, immunohistochemically, cytologically, and ultrastructurally. The malignant myoepithelioma recurred twice and metastasized to one regional lymph node. This tumor was infiltrative with areas of necrosis and hemorrhage. It was composed of malignant-appearing spindle and plasmacytoid cells. Both types of cells were immunoreactive to muscle specific actin, S-100 protein, cytokeratin, vimentin, and neuron-specific enolase. Ultrastructurally, features of myoepithelial cells were seen. Fine-needle aspirate smears showed spindle and plasmacytoid cells, numerous mitoses, and malignant-appearing nuclei. Spindle-cell adenomyoepithelioma of the breast, a small well-circumscribed firm nodule, featured multiple lobules of spindle cells associated with clear-cell glands at the lobular periphery. Histologically and cytologically, the lesion was cellular but appeared benign. The differential diagnosis of myoepithelial neoplasms is discussed.

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