Abstract
We report a primary smooth-muscle tumor of undetermined malignant potential of the liver in a child with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). This patient represents the eighth child infected with the human immunodeficiency virus who developed a mesenchymal tumor other than Kaposi's sarcoma. All these children were younger than 10 years of age. These tumors often were histologically or clinically malignant and all but one were smooth-muscle tumors. These tumors arose exclusively in visceral organs, and the hepatobiliary, gastrointestinal, and tracheopulmonary systems were involved. Transmission of the virus occurred both vertically (in six children) and via blood transfusion (in two). Given the rarity of smooth-muscle tumors in uninfected children, the unusual frequency of these tumors suggests that immunosuppression induced by the virus permits the unregulated proliferation of a primitive mesenchymal cell disposed to myogenous differentiation, a situation not unlike that observed in the development of AIDS-related Kaposi's sarcoma in adults.
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