Abstract

Desmoplastic small round cell tumor (DSRCT) is a neoplasia that occurs mainly in childhood and involves abdominal or peritoneal sites, coexpressing ectodermal and mesenchimal immunophenotypic markers, and is endowed with an impressive stromal desmoplasia that tends to decrease on tumor relapse. To date, over 150 cases have been collected in the literature. Its presumed neuroectodermal histogenesis has been challenged by cytogenetic findings different from those usually associated with neoplasms of neuroectodermal origin. The authors report a case bearing clinical and histologic aspects of typical desmoplastic retroperitoneal small cell tumor, with intense and diffuse nuclear immunopositivity for WT1, but lacking divergent immunophenotype. Ultrastructural investigation revealed that desmoplasia could result from fibrillary synthesis by neoplastic cells.

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