Hyalinizing clear cell carcinoma (HCCC) is a rare, low-grade salivary gland tumor with clear cells and hyalinized stroma. Prognosis of HCCC is excellent with few cases metastasizing to the lymph nodes and lung. We present a case of a 61-year-old male with recurrent HCCC on the base of tongue. Histologic examination revealed sheets of clear and eosinophilic cells with a background of a myxoid-like matrix. In addition, large, bizarre malignant cells, focal necrosis, and atypical mitotic figures were identified. By immunohistochemistry, the clear cells were positive for CK18, EMA and vimentin, focally positive for CK7 and CD10, but negative for p63, HMWK, SMA and calponin. A metastatic renal cell carcinoma was considered a possibility but the tumor was called "poorly-differentiated carcinoma, NOS". The patient underwent primary radiotherapy. A recurrence was identified at 10 months follow-up. A biopsy of the recurrent tumor showed clear cell differentiation and a predominant cribriform pattern with focal cords of eosinophilic cells invading the stroma. In contrast to the original tumor, no mitotic figures, atypia or necrosis were identified. The combination of lower grade and different architectural patterns appeared markedly different than the previous biopsy and the immunohistochemical pattern was also different. The recurrent tumor showed diffuse positivity for p63 and HMWK. It was negative for CD10, vimentin, SMA and calponin. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis was positive for rearrangement of the EWSR1 gene in both samples, confirming that this represented a recurrence of the same tumor. It also confirmed that the initial tumor was a HCCC with high-grade transformation.
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