Abstract

Haemangioblastomas are neoplasms of uncertain histogenesis with cellular and reticular variants advocated in current lore. Herein we describe an intriguing cerebellar specimen with unusual traits including spindle cell morphology and CD34 positivity. A thirty-nine-year old man had an infratentorial tumour discovered incidentally and resected three times. In all the instances, histopathological diagnosis was haemangioblastoma; nonetheless, he had neither physical stigmata nor family history of von Hippel-Lindau disease. By histology, the lesion was composed of areas of conventional stromal cells admixed with territories populated by short-spindled cells packed in lobules, sometimes giving the appearance of gomitoli. Immunoperoxidase-coupled reactions confirmed the expression of inhibin A, neuron-specific enolase (NSE), PS100, and CD57 but also revealed focal immunolabeling for CD34, CD99, and FXIIIa. This case highlights the potential phenotypical diversity that can be found within these neoplasms. Rather than uncertain histogenesis, it may in fact reflect multiple lines of differentiation—histomimesis—prone to adopt unusual morpho- and immunophenotypes in a subset of haemangioblastomas.

Highlights

  • Haemangioblastomas are neoplasms of uncertain histogenesis comprising stromal cells amidst a rich capillary network with cellular and reticular variants advocated in current lore [1, 2]

  • No reaction was detected towards GFAP, Bcl-2, D2-40, or brachyury; ki-67 labeling index was lower than 1%

  • Spindle glia-like cells are on record [2], but they tend to be long, discohesive, and disorganised when adopting this form; some may even be GFAP positive

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Summary

Introduction

Haemangioblastomas are neoplasms of uncertain histogenesis comprising stromal cells amidst a rich capillary network with cellular and reticular variants advocated in current lore [1, 2]. There appear to be some instances in which the cell phenotype experiments changes that seem to vaguely pull them away from these two histological standards. We document a case displaying an unusual spindle cell shape with expression of CD34

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