Abstract

Angiomatoid fibrous histiocytoma (AFH) is a soft-tissue tumour of uncertain differentiation most often arising in the extremities of children and young adults. AFH is a little-known neoplasm and its rarity may result in it being misdiagnosed as either a reactive lesion or a benign or higher-grade tumour. We report 6 cases of AFH in children and we review the clinicopathological and molecular features of this neoplasm published in the literature. The children (aged 4 to 16 years) presented a single nodule involving the forearm (4/6), the trunk or the buttock, and all 5 nodules appeared spontaneously. Microscopic examination revealed well-circumscribed nodular lesions comprising a fibrous pseudo-capsule, haemorrhagic non-endothelial-lined pseudocystic spaces, and sheets of spindle and ovoid cells with dense surrounding lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate. Tumours were positive for desmin, CD68, CD99 and smooth-muscle actin markers. A fusion gene (EWSR1-ATF1) was found in the 3 cases in which molecular investigation was performed. In our series, a diagnosis of AFH had in no event been evoked after clinical examination and radiological investigation. The diagnosis was based in all cases on recognition of characteristic features during histological examination and it was confirmed in 3 cases by the recognition of fusion genes. Complete excision with wide margins allowed complete cure in all cases, supporting a good prognosis of AFH, although long-term follow-up is still mandatory to rule out relapse or metastases, which although rare, are responsible for fatal cases. To avoid unnecessary surgery in patients with AFH, an ultrasound core-needle biopsy should be performed as a first step in order to provide precise diagnosis enabling complete excision to be performed, with the margins being decided in multidisciplinary meetings involving teams specialised in soft-tissue tumours.

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