Plexiform angiomyxoid myofibroblastic tumor (PAMT) is a relatively recently described gastric tumor with a peculiar plexiform growth pattern. PAMT is typified by a myofibroblastic immunophenotype that distinguishes it from the more common gastrointestinal stromal tumors and the rarely documented fibromyxomas. We report an additional PAMT, the seventh tumor with this label, which was an incidental finding on abdominal computed tomography scan of a 35-year-old Indian female. The tumor measured 4 x 3 x 2 cm and demonstrated plexiform architecture, myxoid stroma, prominent vasculature and spindled cells with myofibroblastic differentiation. The clinicopathological features, progesterone immunopositivity, hitherto undocumented, and mimicry of other primary and secondary gastric mesenchymal tumors, including endometrial stromal sarcoma, are discussed.
The clinicopathologic features of 4 AIDS patients with cutaneous colesional Kaposi sarcoma (KS) and cryptococcosis, a rare phenomenon, are described. Biopsies from 3 patients who were highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)-naive demonstrated predominant KS with a conspicuous spindle cell component and small aggregates of cryptococcal yeasts in 2 biopsies and predominant gelatinous cryptococcosis with attenuated KS spindle cells in 1 biopsy. One patient was HAART exposed. He had childhood pulmonary tuberculosis, was treated for disseminated cutaneous cryptococcosis 18 months earlier and presented with cutaneous lesions, odynophagia and massive cervical lymphadenopathy in the eighth week of HAART, after achieving viral suppression and a CD4 cell increase from 28 to 184 cells/μL. His skin biopsy demonstrated a dense lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate, neutrophils, and granulomas with admixed aggregates and single Cryptococcus neoformans and focal aggregation of human herpes virus 8-immunopositive spindle cells. Acid fast bacilli were not identified and mycobacterial molecular studies were negative. The features were compatible with cutaneous cryptococcal immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome. His nodal and oropharyngeal biopsies demonstrated dense mixed, including granulomatous, inflammation with few cryptococcal yeasts and acid fast bacilli, confirmed to be Mycobacterium tuberculosis on polymerase chain reaction testing, without KS. These features were also compatible with immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome, but the exact role of each infection in the extracutaneous sites was unconfirmed. Colesional KS and cryptococcosis served as the sentinel lesion of AIDS in 3 patients and of immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome in 1 patient.
Granulomatous inflammation in KS requires optimal histopathological and molecular investigation to confirm an M. tuberculosis origin. The cutaneous co-lesional occurrence of AIDS-KS and microscopic TB may serve as the sentinel clue to HIV infection, systemic TB, therapeutic noncompliance or multidrug resistant TB.
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