Abstract

The melanotic neuroectodermal tumor of infancy (MNTI) is a rare, usually benign, pigmented neuroectodermal tumor which most often involves the maxilla. The authors reviewed seven cases of MNTI, with patient ages of our patients ranged from nine weeks to 18 months; six of the seven were less than six months old at initial diagnosis. Four patients were males, and all were white. One tumor each was located in the femur, the temporal bone, and the epididymis; the remaining lesions occurred in the maxilla. Three of the four maxillary tumors recurred locally; the epididymal and femoral tumors metastasized. Two of these cases had unique clinical or pathologic features. The case of the femoral tumor is remarkable in that it is the first reported one of MNTI presenting in a long bone. This tumor was aggressively malignant; within two months after its discovery, a large mass of similar tumor was formed in the pelvis, and the tumor resulted in the patient's death. To the authors' knowledge, the case of the temporal bone tumor is the first one of MNTI in which neuronal differentiation of the neuroblastic cells is convincingly demonstrated. This finding provides additional evidence in support of the neuroectodermal theory of origin of these neoplasms.

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