Fanburg-Smith Julie C, Furlong Mary A, Childers Esther L B
Department of Soft Tissue, The Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, Washington, DC 20306, USA.
Mod Pathol. 2002 Oct;15(10):1020-31. doi: 10.1097/01.MP.0000027625.79334.F5.
Liposarcoma is rare in the oral and salivary gland region (OSG), previously described in only case reports and two small series. Clinicopathologic features of a large series of these tumors were studied. Cases coded as "liposarcoma or lipoma" from 1970 to 2000 were searched for in our files. Inclusion required an OSG location and diagnosis by established soft tissue criteria. Dermal, other soft tissue, and intraosseous liposarcomas were excluded. Clinical and pathologic material was reviewed and follow-up obtained. Eighteen liposarcomas were included: 10 from males and 8 from females. The median patient age was 51 years (range, 30-70 years). Specific anatomic locations included buccal mucosa (n = 7), tongue (n = 4), parotid gland (n = 3), soft tissue overlying the mandible (n = 2), and one each of palate and submandibular gland. The average tumor size was 4.2 cm (range, 1.5 to 6.0 cm). Histologically, most tumors were well differentiated, including one atypical lipoma (n = 10), followed by myxoid (n = 5) and dedifferentiated (n = 3). OSG liposarcomas of all subtypes had increased numbers of lipoblasts. All patients were treated with surgical excision alone. Follow-up on 15 patients (83%) over a mean of 16.5 years (range, 2 to 53 years) revealed that three patients had between one and six local recurrences over periods of 18 months to 6 years. Twelve patients were without recurrence, with a mean follow-up of 12.8 years (range, 2-23 years). No patients, including those with dedifferentiated liposarcoma, had metastases or died of disease. OSG liposarcomas are rare tumors of adults, occurring most commonly in the buccal mucosa, tongue, and then parotid gland. There were no pleomorphic liposarcomas in this series; well-differentiated liposarcoma was the most common subtype, which can locally recur but, even with high-grade dedifferentiation, does not necessarily predict poor outcome. Therefore, OSG liposarcomas have better prognosis than liposarcoma in other soft-tissue locations, perhaps based on smaller size at presentation. Complete local excision and careful patient follow-up, without adjuvant therapy, appears to be the best treatment for OSG liposarcoma.
脂肪肉瘤在口腔和涎腺区域(OSG)较为罕见,此前仅有病例报告和两个小系列的研究。本研究对大量此类肿瘤的临床病理特征进行了分析。在我们的档案中检索了1970年至2000年编码为“脂肪肉瘤或脂肪瘤”的病例。纳入标准要求肿瘤位于OSG区域,并根据既定的软组织标准进行诊断。排除皮肤、其他软组织和骨内脂肪肉瘤。对临床和病理资料进行了回顾,并获取了随访信息。共纳入18例脂肪肉瘤,其中男性10例,女性8例。患者的中位年龄为51岁(范围30 - 70岁)。具体解剖部位包括颊黏膜(n = 7)、舌(n = 4)、腮腺(n = 3)、下颌骨上方软组织(n = 2),以及腭部和下颌下腺各1例。肿瘤平均大小为4.2 cm(范围1.5至6.0 cm)。组织学上,大多数肿瘤为高分化,包括10例非典型脂肪瘤,其次是黏液样(n = 5)和去分化型(n = 3)。所有亚型的OSG脂肪肉瘤均可见较多的脂肪母细胞。所有患者均仅接受手术切除治疗。对15例患者(83%)进行了平均16.5年(范围2至53年)的随访,结果显示3例患者在18个月至6年期间出现1至6次局部复发。12例患者无复发,平均随访时间为12.8年(范围2至23年)。包括去分化脂肪肉瘤患者在内,无患者发生转移或因疾病死亡。OSG脂肪肉瘤是成人罕见肿瘤,最常见于颊黏膜、舌,其次是腮腺。本系列中未发现多形性脂肪肉瘤;高分化脂肪肉瘤是最常见的亚型,可局部复发,但即使伴有高级别去分化,也不一定预示预后不良。因此,OSG脂肪肉瘤的预后优于其他软组织部位的脂肪肉瘤,可能是因为其初诊时肿瘤较小。完整的局部切除并对患者进行仔细随访,无需辅助治疗,似乎是治疗OSG脂肪肉瘤的最佳方法。