Isolated breast relapse after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) is less often seen. Chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD) is effective in preventing marrow relapse, but cGVHD seems not to be effective extramedullary relapse (EMR). We report the case of isolated breast relapse after first allo-HSCT for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). A 47-year-old female was diagnosed with ALL achieved complete remission with salvage chemotherapy and underwent allo-HSCT from an HLA-matched sibling male donor. At 17 months post-transplant, she presented with a bilateral breast masses that confirmed the diagnosis lymphoblast involvement. She had no evidence of leukemia in her marrow that determined 100 % full-donor chimerism when she was relapsed in her both breasts.
Uterine perivascular epithelioid cell tumor is a rare mesenchymal tumor consisting of histologically and immunohistochemically distinctive perivascular epithelioid cells. These tumors' being rare, having different morphological features and having similar immunohistochemical expression findings to that of some tumors lead to diagnostic difficulties and misdiagnoses. In the present case report, we aimed to discuss the traps we fell into while diagnosing the curettage material as neuroendocrine tumor and how we have been directed to the diagnosis of perivascular epithelioid cell tumor, as well as to discuss what to be taken into account while making the differential diagnosis under the guidance of the literature.
Large-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC) of the uterine cervix is a rare aggressive tumor.The examination of a cervicovaginal smear from a 31-year-old patient diagnosed with LCNEC after a cervical polypectomy during the 32nd week of pregnancy was carried out. The observed atypical cells had large cytoplasm, increased nucleus: cytoplasm ratio with the nucleus containing coarse, dispersed chromatin, and were arranged in a pseudorosette formation, which all confirmed the diagnosis. In addition, adenocarcinoma in situ (AIS) was determined in the histopathological examination of the subsequent hysterectomy material. Given the rarity of this condition, we present and discuss the case herein.
Background: Mantle cell lymphomas are aggressive, mature B-cell neoplasms characteristically showing overexpression of cyclin D1. Although lymphadenopathy is the most common presentation, involvement of extranodal sites including bone marrow, peripheral blood, liver, gastrointestinal system, and Waldeyer ring is also seen frequently. Soft tissue localization is extremely rare. It has blastoid and pleomorphic subtypes associated with aggressive course. Case description: We describe a 74-year-old man who had been diagnosed 3 years previously with “mantle cell lymphoma-blastoid type” and presented 3 months ago with a giant mass in the right lower extremity that enlarged rapidly up to 15 cm in a few months. Conclusion: We present this rare presentation, which was evaluated in favor of hemangioma before biopsy, together with the data in the literature to emphasize the need for differential diagnosis, especially in cases with a clinical history.
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