We report the fine-needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy diagnosis of two rare cases of primary vascular neoplasms unique to the spleen: a littoral cell angioma from a 31-yr-old Caucasian woman and a splenic hamartoma from a 46-yr-old black man. The cytologic features of splenic hamartoma and of littoral cell angioma of the spleen were described three times in cytologic literature: two were bench-top aspirates and one was FNA biopsy thought to be metastatic carcinoma. To the best of our knowledge, the current two cases were the first diagnosed by FNA biopsy. Our approach to the FNA biopsy diagnosis of these rare vascular neoplasms via compact cell block and immunohistochemistry is described. The differential diagnosis with other primary vascular splenic neoplasms is also discussed.
We report the fine-needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy findings for the primary diagnosis of lymphoproliferative disorders involving the spleen. We analyzed six cases of primary diagnosed lymphoma involving the spleen and out of these cases, identified one case of primary splenic lymphoma. We explore the potential pitfalls and difficulties encountered in making a primary diagnosis of lymphoma involving the spleen and how the preparation of the specimen for flow cytometric studies and/or cell block for immunohistochemical analysis can greatly aid in making a definitive diagnosis. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of T-cell rich B-cell subtype of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and only the second report of primary splenic lymphoma of the spleen diagnosed by FNA biopsy. An extensive review and analysis of the literature involving FNA biopsy of the spleen is also discussed.
Angiosarcoma is the most common malignant neoplasm of the heart. Recurrent pericardial effusions are a common manifestation of cardiac angiosarcomas. The diagnosis of metastatic disease in effusions is often established histologically; few cases have been described in exfoliative cytology. We report a case of metastatic cardiac epithelioid angiosarcoma in peritoneal fluid.
Giant cell tumor is a benign but locally aggressive tumor that primarily affects the epiphyses of long bones of young adults. Pulmonary metastases in giant cell tumor are rare (about 1-9%). Here, we report a case of metastatic pulmonary giant cell tumor in a patient who had a previous history of giant cell tumor of the distal femur with multiple recurrences. The diagnosis of pulmonary metastasis was achieved by cytologic evaluation with concurrent immunohistochemical studies in material obtained by fine-needle aspiration biopsy. The aspirate smears contained clustered and dispersed mononuclear and osteoclast-like giant cells that had bland nuclei with inconspicuous nucleoli. All multinucleated cells showed immunoreactivity to KP-1 antibody, a histiocytic marker (not lineage specific) and only a subset of mononuclear cells (30%) stained with this marker. Twenty percent of the mononuclear cells also displayed increased Ki-67 and p53 protein expression. The pulmonary metastasis was similar morphologically and immunophenotypically to the recurrent giant cell tumor of the bone.
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