Anisometric cell lipoma: Insight from a case series and review of the literature on adipocytic neoplasms in survivors of retinoblastoma suggest a role for RB1 loss and possible relationship to fat-predominant ("fat-only") spindle cell lipoma

Agaimy A (2017)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2017

Journal

Book Volume: 29

Pages Range: 52-56

DOI: 10.1016/j.anndiagpath.2017.04.012

Abstract

The term "anisometric cell lipoma" (ACL) has been proposed recently by Evans for a lipoma variant characterized by striking variation in size and shape of adipocytes but little or no cytological atypia. One patient with multiple ACL had a history of retinoblastoma. The current study analyzed six patients with ACL (4 males and two females aged 34 to 87years; median, 58); all seen in consultation. Five patients presented with solitary and one with multiple subcutaneous masses measuring 5 to 9cm (median, 7.5cm). Affected sites were upper arm (3), shoulder (2), neck (1), trunk (1) and chest wall (1). Surgical excision was the treatment in all cases. No recurrence was recorded at last follow-up (1-17months). Submitted diagnoses were atypical lipomatous tumor (n=3), lipoma with regressive changes (n=1) and unclassified lipomatous neoplasm (n=2). In all cases, the striking variation in size of adipocytes was mentioned as the most or sole worrisome feature justifying external consultation. Histology was similar in all cases. All fulfilled the features reported by Evans as stated above and lacked any conventional spindle cell lipoma-like areas. Multi-vacuolated (lipoblast-like) cells were seen in three cases. MDM2/CDK4 were negative by immunohistochemistry and MDM2 amplification was absent by FISH in all cases. RB1 immunoexpression was lost in 5/5 cases. Rb1 FISH analysis revealed copy number aberrations in 3 of 4 cases (heterozygous deletions in two cases and homozygous deletion in one). In conclusion, ACL shares similar clinicopathological, demographic and molecular features as spindle cell lipoma suggesting related diseases. In the light of the available literature on adipocytic neoplasms in retinoblastoma survivors (>30 patients with multiple lipomas following retinoblastoma reported), it is probably that retinoblastoma-associated lipomas belong to the ACL category. Thus, it seems that Somatic RB1 loss probably drives sporadic ACL in a comparable way to post-retinoblastoma lipomas which were shown to be driven by LOH of the RB1 wild-type allele.

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How to cite

APA:

Agaimy, A. (2017). Anisometric cell lipoma: Insight from a case series and review of the literature on adipocytic neoplasms in survivors of retinoblastoma suggest a role for RB1 loss and possible relationship to fat-predominant ("fat-only") spindle cell lipoma. Annals of Diagnostic Pathology, 29, 52-56. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anndiagpath.2017.04.012

MLA:

Agaimy, Abbas. "Anisometric cell lipoma: Insight from a case series and review of the literature on adipocytic neoplasms in survivors of retinoblastoma suggest a role for RB1 loss and possible relationship to fat-predominant ("fat-only") spindle cell lipoma." Annals of Diagnostic Pathology 29 (2017): 52-56.

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