This is the report of a 6 months old boy presenting with a firm, solitary mass on the temporal region, associated with lysis of local bone. Investigations lead to a diagnosis of infantile myofibromatosis (IM). Wide local excision was performed. At one year follow-up, no recurrence was noted.

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Purpose: Infantile myofibromatosis is characterized by the development of myofibroblastic tumors in young children. In most cases, the disease is caused by somatic gain-of-function variants in platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptor beta (PDGFRB). Here, we reported a novel germline intronic PDGFRB variant, c.

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Adult recurrence of infantile myofibromatosis is exceptional. Here, we report the case of a 23-year-old woman with a late recurrence of infantile myofibromatosis revealed by spontaneous pneumothorax. The chest computed tomography scan found both cavitary and nodular bilateral pulmonary lesions.

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Infantile myofibromatosis is a proliferative disorder occurring during infancy and early childhood, marked by the development of nodular or diffuse lesions consisting of various mesenchymal elements. Intracranial involvement is infrequently reported. Here, we present the case of a 3-year-old girl exhibiting a rare manifestation of IM with intracranial parenchymal involvement, displaying a histological pattern documented in existing literature on patients with infantile myofibromatosis.

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Background: Infantile myofibromatosis (IM) is a rare disorder characterized by benign tumors in the skin, subcutaneous tissue, muscle, and occasionally viscera. IM can be hereditary due to PDGFRB or NOTCH3 variants. Treatment is mainly conservative or surgical.

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