Infantile myofibromatosis

Infantile myofibromatosis is the most common fibrous tumor of infancy, in which eighty percent of patients have solitary lesions with half of these occurring on the head and neck, and 60% are present at or soon after birth.[2]:606 Less commonly, infantile myofibromatosis presents as multiple lesions of skin, muscle, and bone with about 1/3 of these cases also having lesions in their visceral organs. All of these cases have an excellent prognosis with their tumors sometimes regressing spontaneously except for those cases in which there is visceral involvement where the prognosis is poor.[3] Infantile myofibromatosis and the classic form of mesoblastic nephroma have been suggested to be the same disease because of their very similar histology. However, studies on the distribution of cell-type markers (i.e. cyclin D1 and Beta-catenin) indicate that the two neoplasms likely have different cellular origins.[4][5]

Infantile myofibromatosis
Other namesCongenital generalized fibromatosis,[1] and Congenital multicentric fibromatosis[1]
SpecialtyOncology 

See also

References

  1. Rapini, Ronald P.; Bolognia, Jean L.; Jorizzo, Joseph L. (2007). Dermatology: 2-Volume Set. St. Louis: Mosby. ISBN 978-1-4160-2999-1.
  2. James, William; Berger, Timothy; Elston, Dirk (2005). Andrews' Diseases of the Skin: Clinical Dermatology. (10th ed.). Saunders. ISBN 0-7216-2921-0.
  3. "Childhood Soft Tissue Sarcoma Treatment (PDQ®): Health Professional Version". PDQ Cancer Information Summaries. National Cancer Institute (US). 2002.
  4. El Demellawy D, Cundiff CA, Nasr A, Ozolek JA, Elawabdeh N, Caltharp SA, Masoudian P, Sullivan KJ, de Nanassy J, Shehata BM (2016). "Congenital mesoblastic nephroma: a study of 19 cases using immunohistochemistry and ETV6-NTRK3 fusion gene rearrangement". Pathology. 48 (1): 47–50. doi:10.1016/j.pathol.2015.11.007. PMID 27020209.
  5. Wang ZP, Li K, Dong KR, Xiao XM, Zheng S (2014). "Congenital mesoblastic nephroma: Clinical analysis of eight cases and a review of the literature". Oncology Letters. 8 (5): 2007–2011. doi:10.3892/ol.2014.2489. PMC 4186628. PMID 25295083.
Classification
External resources


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