Abstract
BackgroundBladder leiomyosarcoma is the most frequent mesenchymal neoplasm of the bladder. However, the rarity of the disease and some morphological aspects could give serious problems to differential diagnosis.Case presentationA 86-year-old male patient was referred to our institution to undergo endoscopic low-urinary-tract re-evaluation 2 months after the detection of a “low-grade urothelial neoplasia” in urinary cytology. A TURBT (transurethral resection of bladder tumor) was performed and revealed a tumor extending for 3.5 cm with thin stalk peduncle on the left lateral wall of the bladder, cephalad and lateral to the left ureteral orifice. The exophytic part of the tumor was resected with the underlying bladder wall. Histologically, the tumor showed a quite complex pattern, composed of spindle cells, with often invasion to the surrounding bladder muscular wall, and the presence of numerous multinucleated, osteoclast-like giant cells, scattered throughout the neoplasia.ConclusionsHere we report a unique case of urinary bladder leiomyosarcoma with osteoclast-like multinucleated giant cells (OGCs). These cells, confounding the morphological aspect, indeed showed an immunohistochemical phenotype of non-neoplastic origin (most likely a histiocyte/macrophage differentiation). We feel that the presence of the OGCs within this tumor is reactive. Nevertheless, more research is necessary to understand the role of OGCs in urinary bladder tumors and leiomyosarcoma, in paticular.
Highlights
Bladder leiomyosarcoma is the most frequent mesenchymal neoplasm of the bladder
Here we report a unique case of urinary bladder leiomyosarcoma with osteoclast-like multinucleated giant cells (OGCs)
More research is necessary to understand the role of OGCs in urinary bladder tumors and leiomyosarcoma, in paticular
Summary
Urinary bladder leiomyosarcoma is an aggressive and rare malignant neoplasm. We presented a unique case of urinary bladder leiomyosarcoma with osteoclast-like multinucleated giant cells. This is the first case report describing OGCs in a urinary bladder leiomyosarcoma. The multinucleated giant cells observed in this case, confounding the morphological aspect and make the appropriate diagnosis difficult. The general morphologic features suggested that these elements represented a part of the inflammatory and stromal response to the neoplastic spindle cells [16]. Immunohistochemical analyses confirmed that these cells are not neoplastic, but most likely histiocyte/macrophage derived cells. More research is necessary to understand the role of OGCs in urinary bladder tumors in general and in leiomyosarcoma
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