Abstract

We report an autopsy case of malignant epithelioid angiomyolipoma in a 36-year-old male tuberous sclerosis patient. He had been diagnosed to have a bilateral renal tumor 20 years previously. The left kidney had been surgically resected at the age of 34, and the left renal tumor was pathologically diagnosed as classic angiomyolipoma and epithelioid angiomyolipoma. He suddenly died of cardiac arrest, and at autopsy the right kidney weighed 7120 g. The tumor presented with massive necrosis invading the inferior vena cava, but was not hemorrhagic. Microscopic examination revealed tumor cells varying in size with a predominantly solid proliferation pattern and marked atypical large cells with vesicular nuclei and abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm. Mitotic figures were often encountered, and atypical forms were also present. Metastatic lesions were identified in the right lung, liver, diaphragm, and mesentery. Immunohistochemical examination showed epithelioid angiomyolipoma cells that were focally reactive for HMB-45 and showed diffuse positive staining for Melan-A. No mutation was detected in the p53 gene by polymerase chain reaction–single-strand conformation polymorphism (PCR–SSCP) analysis despite diffuse immunoreactivity for p53. This case was proven to be malignant because of the occurrence of distant metastases, and showed that p53 mutations are not always associated with malignant transformation in epithelioid angiomyolipoma.

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