Abstract. A sarcomatoid carcinoma was diagnosed in the lung of a 10-year-old captive Egyptian fruit bat (Rousettus aegyptiacus). Both carcinomatous and sarcomatous cytologic phenotypes were identified histologically. Cells of both types stained positive for pancytokeratin and S-100. Stromal cells stained positively for muscle actin. No staining for vimentin was noted in either neoplastic or normal internal control tissues. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first report of a pulmonary sarcomatoid carcinoma in a bat, and only the third report of sarcomatoid carcinoma outside the human literature.Key words: Egyptian fruit bats; immunohistochemistry; neoplasia; Rousettus aegyptiacus; sarcomatoid carcinoma.A 10-year-old, castrated, male Egyptian fruit bat (Rousettus aegyptiacus) was found to be weak and on the floor of its enclosure. The exhibit housed approximately 30 Egyptian fruit bats and 15 straw-colored fruit bats (Eidolon helvum). Clinical signs included hypothermia, severe dyspnea, and taut abdominal musculature. Diagnostic imaging revealed fluid in the abdomen, and 32 ml of serosanguineous fluid was removed via abdominocentesis; no subsequent analysis was done on this fluid. Supportive care was instituted, but the animal died several hours later.At necropsy, the carcass weighed 154 g and was markedly dehydrated. Muscle mass and fat stores were reduced. The penis was extruded, swollen and bruised at its tip. A solid 7 mm 3 3 mm cream-colored mass was adherent to the base of the heart and adjacent lung. A small amount of serosanguineous fluid was present in the abdominal cavity; there was no fluid in the pleural or pericardial spaces. All other tissues appeared normal. Differential diagnoses for the thoracic mass included a heart base tumor and pulmonary carcinoma. Tissue samples were fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin, processed for histology by routine methods, and stained with hematoxylin and eosin.Histologically, the mass was composed of neoplastic cells and was contained largely within the lung. There were two distinct regions with differing cytologic phenotypes. The first was dominated by large, round epithelial cells that tended to form packets (carcinomatous component; Fig. 1). Nuclei were round to ovoid with scant chromatin and variably 0-2 nucleoli. There was 4-fold anisokaryosis and occasional multinucleate cells were evident. Mitotic figures were rare. The cytoplasm was abundant with a nucleus:cytoplasm ratio varying from approximately 1:1 to 1:10.The second region made up approximately 60% of the section examined and was comprised of spindle-shaped cells arranged in irregular swirls (sarcomatous component; Fig. 2). Nuclei of these cells were variably plump and oval to elongate, with finely stippled chromatin and occasionally a single nucleolus. Mitotic figures were rare. In a few