Abstract

Although extraskeletal myxoid chondrosarcoma (EMC) is a rare soft tissue sarcoma, its morphological, ultrastructural, and cytogenetical features have been well investigated. The authors describe a very rare variant of EMC with neuroendocrine differentiation. A 49-year-old woman presented with an 11-cm, deep-seated, lobulated soft tissue mass in the left thigh and a lymph node metastasis in the left groin. Analysis of fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) smears and a cellblock prepared from FNAB material, as well as histological sections of the excised tumor, showed a neoplasm composed of rounded and elongated cells arranged in strands and cords in a myxoid background matrix. The nuclei were rounded and often eccentric. The immunohistochemical phenotype was S-100 protein m, neuron specific enolase +, and chromogranin A+. Electron microscopy showed tumor cells harboring numerous mitochondria, partial basal lamina, and unequivocal neuroendocrine granules. Molecular genetic analysis revealed a TAF15/NR4A3 fusion, a characteristic rearrangement occurring in about 25% of cytogenetically investigated EMC. A few cases of EMC with neuroendocrine differentiation have been reported. However, the only previously described case with genetic information also displayed the t(9;17) instead of the more common t(9;22), suggesting an association between type of primary chromosome abnormality and neuroendocrine differentiation.

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