AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed 28 cases of anterior mediastinal liposarcoma in 16 males and 12 females, with an average age of 43 years; symptoms often included dyspnea and chest pain, but many tumors were found incidentally on chest X-rays.
  • Most tumors were low-grade, primarily consisting of well-differentiated subtypes, with a small number of high-grade cases displaying more aggressive characteristics; some low-grade tumors were mistaken for lymphoid neoplasms due to lymphocyte aggregates.
  • Clinical follow-up indicated a recurrence rate of 31.8% among patients, with an average survival of 2.6 years for deceased patients, while no metastases were reported.

Article Abstract

We studied 28 cases of anterior mediastinal liposarcoma occurring in 16 males and 12 females with a mean age of 43 years (range, 14-72). Presenting symptoms included dyspnea (four cases) and chest pain (four cases), although 11 tumors were detected incidentally by routine chest radiography. Seven cases were believed to be located within the thymus. Most (i.e., 25) of the cases were of low grade, with the well-differentiated lipoma-like or sclerosing subtypes constituting 60% and the myxoid subtype constituting 28%; the remaining 12% exhibited mixed features. Three cases were pleomorphic type. Several low-grade tumors exhibited widespread, dense aggregates of mature-appearing lymphocytes and plasma cells, which occasionally obscured the mesenchymal nature of the neoplasm, suggesting instead a lymphoid neoplasm or a reactive fibroinflammatory condition. The three high-grade tumors showed combinations of pleomorphic and round cell patterns, with focal myxoid areas. Of the cases grossly arising within the thymus, only one showed extensive thymic tissue within the lesion ("thymoliposarcoma"); six others exhibited residual thymus peripheral to the tumor. Clinical follow-up in 23 cases revealed recurrence in seven patients (31.8%), with a mean interval to recurrence of 3 years. Eight patients died (mean survival, 2.6 years), one postoperatively and three following a recurrence. Fifteen patients were alive (mean survival, 2 years), four with recurrent tumor. The myxoid tumors had a somewhat more aggressive course than the well-differentiated tumors. Metastases were not observed in any of the patients.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00000478-199507000-00006DOI Listing

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