Malignant Glomus Tumor Arising in a Long Standing Precursor Lesion. - 2016

Available online from MWHC library: Feb 1996 - present

Malignant glomus tumor is an exceedingly rare vascular malignancy of unclear etiology, which is believed to arise de novo or from malignant transformation of a benign glomus tumor. The authors present a case of an elderly woman evaluated for a painful 2.5-cm purple-brown tumor on the right forearm that grew rapidly within a long-standing, seemingly benign lesion. An excisional biopsy revealed a multilobular dermal tumor composed of areas of benign-appearing glomus tumor cells interspersed with areas of dense, pleomorphic cells arranged in sheets and fascicles with an elevated mitotic rate. The diagnosis of malignant glomus tumor was made on the basis of the lesion's nuclear atypia and elevated mitotic rate. This case demonstrates malignant transformation of a presumably benign glomus tumor precursor lesion highlighting this rarely reported phenomenon. The authors present this case to raise awareness of this vascular malignancy that carries a significant risk of metastasis.


English

0193-1091


*Cell Transformation, Neoplastic
*Glomus Tumor/pa [Pathology]
*Skin Neoplasms/pa [Pathology]
Aged, 80 and over
Biomarkers, Tumor/an [Analysis]
Biopsy
Cell Proliferation
Female
Glomus Tumor/ch [Chemistry]
Glomus Tumor/su [Surgery]
Humans
Immunohistochemistry
Skin Neoplasms/ch [Chemistry]
Skin Neoplasms/su [Surgery]
Time Factors
Treatment Outcome
Tumor Burden


MedStar Washington Hospital Center


Dermatology


Case Reports
Journal Article