Rationale:
Primary carcinosarcoma of the upper urinary tract is rare. Ureteral duplication is one of the most common urinary tract malformations. Additionally, the association between ureteral duplication and malignancy is unknown. To the best of our knowledge, no cases of malignant tumors diagnosed as carcinosarcoma with ureteral duplication have been reported. We herein report the case of a patient with carcinosarcoma of the ureteropelvic junction associated with incomplete ureteral duplication.
Patient concerns:
A 60-year-old Japanese woman presented with painless gross hematuria. She had a history of total hysterectomy and chemotherapy for endometrioid carcinoma 5 years before. She had no history of occupational chemical exposure.
Diagnoses:
Radiographic imaging revealed right incomplete ureteral duplication, hydronephrosis, and a polypoid tumor in the ureteropelvic junction of the lower moiety of the right kidney. Urine cytology showed a small amount of degenerated atypical epithelial and nonepithelial cells. The transureteral biopsy specimen showed dysplastic urothelial cells and atypical myoid spindle cells. These findings were indefinite for malignancy.
Interventions:
The patient underwent right nephroureterectomy. Pathological examination of the resected tumor showed a biphasic neoplasm composed of carcinomatous and sarcomatous components. The sarcomatous component was immunohistochemically positive for vimentin, desmin, h-caldesmon, and α-SMA and negative for pancytokeratin (AE1/AE3), low molecular weight cytokeratin (CAM 5.2), EMA, E-cadherin, GATA3, uroplakin 2, and p63. Based on these findings, we diagnosed the tumor as carcinosarcoma.
Outcomes:
The postoperative course was uneventful. No additional therapy was administered. The patient has remained alive without recurrence for 21 months since surgery.
Lessons:
Carcinosarcoma can arise from ureteral duplication. Although the majority of carcinosarcomas of the upper urinary tract are diagnosed at an advanced stage and have a poor prognosis, some can have a less aggressive course. Further studies are needed to determine the association between ureteral duplication and malignancy.
Cytological detection of chordoma cells in the serosal cavity is challenging because of its rare presentation. Herein, we report a case of chordoma showing malignant pleural effusion accompanied by pleuropulmonary metastases in a 68-year-old woman.Cytological analysis was performed using pleural fluid obtained following thoracentesis. Conventional cytological staining demonstrated few clusters of large, atypical cells characterized by epithelial cell-like connectivity and rich cytoplasm with foamy and/or multivacuolar changes. The nuclei of these atypical cells were large and either round or oval with no conspicuous irregularities in the nuclear membrane.Periodic acid-Schiff staining of these atypical cells revealed fine granules in the cytoplasm. Giemsa staining showed foamy and/or multivacuolar cytoplasm in these cells, with metachromatic mucoid stroma in the surroundings. Immunocytochemistry analysis using cellblock showed these cells to be positive for broad cytokeratins, epithelial membrane antigen, S100 protein, vimentin, and Brachyury. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case report in which chordoma cells were cytologically detected in pleural effusions. Our findings also suggest that conventional cytology combined with cellblock immunocytochemistry can increase the accuracy of chordoma cell detection in the serosal cavity.
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