Extrapulmonary lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM) is a rare neoplasm of spindle cells exhibiting melanocytic and myoid differentiation that arises as a mass in the mediastinum, retroperitoneum, uterine wall, and/or intraperitoneal lymph nodes. Many patients also have pulmonary LAM, tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), and/or other neoplasms of the perivascular epithelioid cell tumor family. This study reports 26 patients with clinically occult LAM involving pelvic/para-aortic lymph nodes removed from women undergoing surgical staging of a uterine (17), ovarian (5), cervical (3), or urinary bladder (1) neoplasm. None of the patients exhibited symptoms of pulmonary LAM, and the median patient age (56 y) was older than what would be expected for patients presenting with pulmonary LAM. Only 2/26 patients had TSC. Four patients also had uterine LAM. One of these 4 had uterine perivascular epithelioid cell tumor, and 1 had vaginal angiomyolipoma. In all 26 patients the lymph node LAM was grossly occult, measured 3.5 mm on average (1 to 19 mm), and involved either a single lymph node (12/26) or multiple lymph nodes (14/26). HMB45 was positive in 24/25 cases, mostly in a focal or patchy distribution. Other melanocytic markers included MiTF (12/14) and MelanA (2/12). Myoid markers included smooth muscle actin (23/23) and desmin (15/16), mostly in a diffuse distribution. Estrogen receptor was positive in all cases tested, as was D240 expression in the lymphatic endothelium lining the spindle cell bundles. Concurrent findings in the involved lymph nodes included metastatic carcinoma (3/26), endosalpingiosis (3/26), and reactive lymphoid hyperplasia (13/26). This study demonstrates that clinically occult lymph node LAM can be detected during surgical staging of pelvic cancer and is not commonly associated with pulmonary LAM or TSC, although these patients should still be formally evaluated for both of these diseases.
Epidermal barrier disruption caused by atypical squamous proliferations of the lip (SOL) creates an ideal environment for fungal growth. Histologic features of SOL include parakeratosis overlying partial-or full-thickness keratinocyte atypia with or without invasion of the dermis, dermal solar elastosis, and scattered inflammatory cells which are predominantly lymphocytes. Histologic features of SOL with fungal superinfections overlap those seen in primary fungal cheilitis with reactive atypia, creating a diagnostic challenge. One-hundred seventy SOL cases were examined for the presence of fungal elements, and the histological features associated with superinfection were identified. Cases diagnosed as actinic cheilitis with fungal superinfection were carefully examined to rule out the possibility of misdiagnosed primary fungal cheilitis with reactive atypia. Histopathological characteristics commonly present with fungal hyphae included intraepidermal or intradermal neutrophils, bacterial colonies, and erosion or ulceration. Medical record review of those patients treated conservatively with topical antifungals revealed persistent clinical neoplasm and histological evidence of residual SOL on repeat biopsy. Thus, when biopsies exhibit histological overlap between these 2 entities, clinicians should keep a high index of suspicion for underlying SOL and carefully follow these patients if conservative antifungal therapy is initially trialed.
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