Primary pancreatic leiomyosarcomas are rare tumors of the pancreas that are usually diagnosed after resection or by biopsy. One case in the literature has utilized endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspiration (EUS-FNA) cytology. We report a second case of a primary pancreatic leiomyosarcoma that yielded diagnostic material on EUS-FNA cytology. A 72-year-old female presented with 3-4 months of abdominal pain. A CT scan showed a large heterogeneous, lobulated pancreatic head and uncinate mass and multiple hypoattenuating liver lesions. An EUS-FNA was performed on one of the liver lesions with a 25-gauge needle, yielding an adequate sample with lesional cells. The initial read was a spindle cell neoplasm. A subsequent endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle biopsy with a 22-gauge needle was performed on the pancreatic head mass to rule out two primaries and to provide tissue for a mitotic index in the case of gastrointestinal tumor. Both the cell block of the EUS-FNA and the core biopsy were equally cellular and showed interlacing spindle cells that stained positive for SMA and negative for DOG-1, CD 117, and CD34. In addition, the core biopsy of the pancreas stained positive for Desmin. A diagnosis of a primary pancreatic leiomyosarcoma was made and the patient was started on systemic chemotherapy. Primary pancreatic leiomyosarcomas are rare pancreatic tumors that may yield diagnostic material by EUS-FNA with a 25-gauge needle. Diagn. Cytopathol. 2016;44:1070-1073. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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