According to our systematic literature review (PRISMA guidelines), only 37 vulvar squamous cell carcinomas (VSCCs) were diagnosed during pregnancy (age range: 17–41 years). The tumor size range was 0.3–15 cm. The treatment was performed after (14/37, 38%), before (10/37, 27%), or before-and-after delivery (11/37, 30%). We found that 21/37 (57%) cases were stage I, 2 II (5%), 11 III (30%), and 3 IVB (8%). HPV-related features (condylomas/warts; HPV infection; high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion) were reported in 11/37 (30%) cases. We also found that 9/37 (24%) patients had inflammatory conditions (lichen sclerosus/planus, psoriasis, chronic dermatitis). The time-to-recurrence/progression (12/37, 32%) ranged from 0 to 36 (mean 9) months. Eight women died of disease (22%) 2.5–48 months after diagnosis, 2 (5%) were alive with disease, and 23 (62%) were disease-free at the end of follow-up. Pregnant patients must be followed-up. Even if they are small, newly arising vulvar lesions should be biopsied, especially in women with risk factors (HPV, dermatosis, etc.). The treatment of VSCCs diagnosed in late third trimester might be delayed until postpartum. Elective cesarean section may prevent vulvar wound dehiscence. In the few reported cases, pregnancy/fetal outcomes seemed to not be affected by invasive treatments during pregnancy. However, clinicians must be careful; larger cohorts should define the best treatment. Definite guidelines are lacking, so a multidisciplinary approach and discussion with patients are mandatory.
A 79-year-old woman presented with a long history of peripheral eosinophilia. Previous right hemicolectomy for colonic polyposis was reported. Laboratory tests were notable for mild macrocitic anaemia and eosinophilia. β2 microglobulin and serum tryptase levels were elevated. Serum immunofixation revealed IgA/kappa monoclonal protein. Bence-Jones protein was positive. Bone marrow (BM) biopsy revealed the coexistence of two neoplastic components. Cohesive clusters of bland-looking, spindle-shaped mast cells, representing 20% of marrow cellularity, were close to aggregates of mature plasma cells occupying 40% of marrow cellularity. Molecular analysis on marrow aspirate demonstrated KIT D816V mutation, TET2 mutation, monoallelic deletion of TP53/17p13 and trisomy of ATM/11q23. A bone density study revealed mild osteoporosis. Full skeletal X-rays and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of spine and hips showed multiple, small rarefaction areas and an old L1-L2 fracture, both ascribed to osteoporosis. The association of systemic mastocytosis (SM) and multiple myeloma (MM) is very uncommon. The coexistence of SM with MM placed our patient in the SM with associated clonal haematological non-mast-cell lineage disease (SM-AHN) subtype. Midostaurin therapy was started.
Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is an asbestos‐related and locally invasive tumor with poor prognosis. The acquisition of histological material is mandatory in order to establish a diagnosis. In this situation, the sampling of tissue is generally performed via a thoracoscopic pleural biopsy, either medically or surgically. The use of endobronchial ultrasound‐guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS‐TBNA) or transesophageal fine needle aspiration with an EBUS scope (EUS‐B‐FNA) of pleural lesions have only rarely been reported due to the theoretical limitations of tissue acquisition in such cases. We herein report a rare case of MPM successfully diagnosed via EUS‐B‐FNA in a 49‐year‐old woman with an unusual presentation characterized by solid thickening in the right mediastinal pleura.
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