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CASE REPORT
APSP J Case Rep 2011; Vol. 2 (1)
OPEN ACCESS
Desmoid Tumor of the Buttock
in a Preadolescent Child
Yogesh Kumar Sarin,* Nita
Khurana
Department of Paediatric Surgery, Maulana Azad Medical
College New Delhi, India.
*Corresponding
Author's E-mail address: yksarin@yahoo.com
APSP J Case Rep 2011; 2: 2
Competing
Interest: None Declared
ABSTRACT
Extra-abdominal desmoid tumors are circumscribed
but non-capsulated neoplasms of differentiated fibrous tissue arising from
musculoaponeurotic tissues. They tend to be locally infiltrative, resulting in a
high rate of local recurrence without metastasis, following surgical resection.
We report a 9-year-old boy who had a large desmoid tumor in his right buttock
that was successfully excised.
KEY WORDS
Desmoid Tumor, Aggressive fibromatosis,
Musculoaponeurotic fibromatosis, Fibrosarcoma,
Recurrence.
HOW TO CITE
Sarin YK, Khurana N. Desmoid tumor of the buttock in a preadolescent
child. APSP J Case Rep 2011; 2:2.
INTRODUCTION
Desmoid
tumors (aggressive fibromatosis, musculo-aponeurotic fibromatosis) are poorly
understood rare tumors of childhood. Enzinger and Weiss had classified desmoid
tumors into superficial (palmar, plantar, and penile fibromatoses), and deep
[extra-abdominal (head and neck, chest wall, back, extremities), abdominal
[(abdominal wall); and intra-abdominal (pelvic, mesenteric)] types [1].
Extra-abdominal desmoid tumors vary from benign nodules to infiltrating
masses in their extent. The common sites of occurrence in children are head and
neck and the shoulder regions. Hip and buttock in children account for only 8%
of all desmoid tumors [2].
We report a successful surgical
extirpation of desmoid tumor arising from buttock in a child, and briefly
discuss management of this rare tumor in context of the particular anatomic
site.
CASE REPORT
A 9-year-old boy presented with right-sided sciatica and
gradually increasing swelling in the right buttock of 6-month duration. His pain
was constant but unrelated to movement or activity. There were no significant
constitutional symptoms. Examination revealed a mildly tender, firm to hard,
fixed, large mass measuring 8.5 X 7.5 cm in the outer upper part of the right
buttock. There was no lesion elsewhere in the body.
Chest radiograph was
unremarkable. MRI showed a large, relatively well defined mass lesion measuring
5.5 x 7.5 x 8.5 cm in the right gluteal region involving the gluteus maximus,
medius and minimus muscles and infiltrating into the pyriformis. The lesion
appeared hypointense on T1 -weighted and hyperintense on
T2 -weighted images with marked heterogeneity (Fig. 1). The mass was
abutting the right iliac blade, though the cortical outline of the bone was well
maintained. Fine needle aspiration cytology of the lesion was reported as benign
spindle cell lesion with a differential diagnosis of proliferative
fasciomyositis, and desmoid tumor.
A near-total excision of mass was
done after an arduous dissection. The excised mass was firm to hard, grey lesion
that measured 9 x 7 x 4 cm. It was diagnosed as desmoid tumor on histopathology.
Surgical margins of resected specimen were not free of tumor (Fig. 2). The
post-operative period was uneventful. No adjuvant therapy was administered. The
child is under close follow up for six months and no recurrence is noted so
far.
DISCUSSION
Desmoid tumors are rare benign mesenchymal tumors that may
occur in non-syndromic or syndromic forms. The syndromic form is termed as
Gardner’s syndrome where there may be multiple desmoid tumors in the soft
tissues and the mesentery in association with colonic polyps, sebaceous cyst and
ostomas [3].
Radiographic findings in the childhood desmoid tumors are
nonspecific, showing appearances from a localized, circumscribed soft tissue
mass to an aggressive tumor with local invasion, as seen with malignant
neoplasm. The plain film, CT scan, sonographic, and MR characteristics are
similar to those of other benign and malignant mesenchymal tumors. Although
these examinations are not specific, they can help define tumor margins and
extent [4].
The definite diagnosis of desmoid tumors is made
histologically only on biopsy or after surgery. Pathological examination reveals
a poorly circumscribed, firm, infiltrative grayish-white trabeculated mass that
blends into the adjacent soft tissues. Elongated, slender, spindle-shaped cells
and dense, often hyalinized, collagen fibers are arranged in bundles. The
cellularity of the lesions and mitoses are quite variable but rarely of the
degree to suggest a fibrosarcoma. In fact, fibrosarcoma of soft tissues have
hardly ever been reported between the age of 6 months and 10 years
[5].
The only known treatment in childhood desmoid tumors is
wide surgical extirpation. Local recurrences are common with some of the series
having reported a recurrence rate of 60%. Positive surgical margins at initial
resection predict future recurrence. The anatomic site, size of the mass and
histopathologic features are unreliable indicators. Simple excision has been
known to have a higher recurrence rate as compared to wide extirpation, but the
latter may not be always possible. As such, extensive extirpative
surgeries have been known to result in major morbidity. Fortunately,
the histologic pattern remains more or less static through a number of local
recurrences. It would never become mitotically active and evolve into a
fibrosarcoma. An increase in mature collagen may be the only noticeable change
[5-7].
Radiotherapy has been used for local recurrence
following one or more surgical resections in adults. Radiotherapy has been also
administered for non-resectable desmoid tumors as well as those that could be
excised only sub-totally. Post-operative radiation can improve the rate of local
control for patients with a high risk of recurrence. As desmoid tumors tend to
be locally infiltrative, fields must be very generous to prevent marginal
recurrence [8,9].
Systemic chemotherapy offers an alternative to ablative
surgery in the event of local failure following radiation therapy.
Combination chemotherapy has also been advocated in unresectable tumors.
Regional chemotherapy has also been used in conjunction with wide excision with
persistent, widely invasive desmoid tumors. The precise indication for their use
in childhood desmoid tumors is not well defined [8-10].
For
adult patients with desmoid tumors that are not amenable to surgery or radiation
therapy, the use of hormonal agents and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs
(NSAIDs) have been attempted, with some success [10].
Rarely,
an expectant therapy has been advocated for unresectable lesions as some of
these tumors have been known to regress spontaneously. Spontaneous regression
has been noted in female subjects at the onset of either the menarche or the
menopause, suggesting that hormonal change might be involved. The premise of
such an advocacy is that it is not a malignant condition and has never
metastasized. But then there are other researchers who report that the cells of
desmoid tumor were highly proliferative with their biological activity bearing
resemblance to fibrosarcoma and believe in grouping desmoid tumors
as of low grade malignancy [7,11].
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SW. Soft tissue tumors, 3rd ed. St. Louis: Mosby, 1995:165-268.
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