Solitary fibrous tumour and haemangiopericytoma: evolution of a concept

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_0400C1E7F68B
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Publication sub-type
Review (review): journal as complete as possible of one specific subject, written based on exhaustive analyses from published work.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Solitary fibrous tumour and haemangiopericytoma: evolution of a concept
Journal
Histopathology
Author(s)
Gengler  C., Guillou  L.
ISSN
0309-0167 (Print)
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2006
Volume
48
Number
1
Pages
63-74
Notes
PT - Journal Article PT - Review
Abstract
Haemangiopericytoma (HPC) was described in 1942 by Stout and Murray as a distinctive soft tissue neoplasm, presumably of pericytic origin, exhibiting a characteristic well-developed "staghorn" branching vascular pattern. Over the years, it appeared that this growth pattern was a non-specific one, shared by numerous, unrelated benign and malignant lesions, and that HPC was better considered as a diagnosis of exclusion. Three categories of lesion may now be individualized within the heterogeneous group of HPC-like neoplasms. The first category corresponds to those non-HPC neoplasms that occasionally display HPC-like features (e.g. synovial sarcoma). Lesions belonging to the second category show clear evidence of myoid/pericytic differentiation and correspond to true HPCs. They generally show a benign clinical course, and include glomangiopericytoma/myopericytoma, infantile myofibromatosis (previously called infantile HPC), and a subset of sinonasal HPCs. The third category is the solitary fibrous tumour (SFT) lesional group, which includes fibrous-to-cellular SFTs, and related lesions such as giant cell angiofibromas and lipomatous HPCs. In practice, any HPC-like lesion can be allocated to one of these categories, leaving the ill-defined "haemangiopericytoma" category empty
Keywords
Diagnosis,Differential/Fibroma/diagnosis/Pathology/Hemangiopericytoma/Humans/Soft Tissue Neoplasms
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
29/01/2008 19:36
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:25
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