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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Cellular neurothekeoma with histiocytic differentiation.

BACKGROUND: It is generally accepted that the two types of neurothekeoma (myxoid type and cellular type) represent the two poles of a spectrum. This concept, however, has recently been challenged, and cellular neurothekeomas have been suggested as a separate classification and are included in the "fibrohistiocytic" category by some authors. Cellular neurothekeomas have been reported to show negative immunohistochemical staining for histiocytic markers, and PG-M1 is now considered to be the most reliable histiocytic marker. CASE REPORT: We report a case of cellular neurothekeoma. The histopathological features in this case were typical for cellular neurothekeoma. Immunohistochemically, the neoplastic cells were diffusely positive for S-100A6 protein, PGP9.5, CD10, CD68 (KP1), PG-M1, and Vimentin, and negative for other antibodies including S-100 protein and factor XIIIa. CONCLUSIONS: Cellular neurothekeoma expressing both KP-1 and PG-M1 is considered to show histiocytic differentiation, and may be interpreted as a neoplasm with immature nerve sheath differentiation, incidentally expressing histiocytic markers, or as an undifferentiated neoplasm derived from the neural crest cells of nerve sheath/fibrohistiocyte lineage. These results, such as the concomitant expressions of PGP9.5/S-100A6 and PG-M1/CD68 (KP-1), support the theory of multiple differentiation in cellular neurothekeomas. The significance of the expression of CD10 in this cellular neurothekeoma is unclear.[1]

References

  1. Cellular neurothekeoma with histiocytic differentiation. Misago, N., Satoh, T., Narisawa, Y. J. Cutan. Pathol. (2004) [Pubmed]
 
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