The American journal of surgical pathology
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Am. J. Surg. Pathol. · Mar 2004
Case ReportsAngiomatous meningioma: a clinicopathologic study of 38 cases.
To characterize histopathological and clinical features of angiomatous meningioma, 38 cases of angiomatous meningioma, ie, meningiomas whose vascular component exceeded 50% of the total tumor area, are reported. In addition to histologic examinations, clinical characteristics as well as follow-up data were compiled. Angiomatous meningiomas constituted 2.1% of all meningiomas. ⋯ To conclude, angiomatous meningiomas share histologic and clinical features of benign meningiomas. Since all angiomatous meningiomas examined here were grade 1 tumors, the diagnosis of angiomatous meningioma may have prognostic implications. Therefore, the existence of this rare subgroup of meningioma appears justified.
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Am. J. Surg. Pathol. · Mar 2004
Invasive micropapillary salivary duct carcinoma: a distinct histologic variant with biologic significance.
An invasive micropapillary component has been described in tumors of several organs and is nearly always associated with aggressive biologic behavior. We present 14 cases of salivary duct carcinoma (SDC) with an invasive micropapillary component (invasive micropapillary SDC) and compare the clinicopathologic findings of these cases with those of cases of conventional SDC. The mean age of the 14 patients (10 men, 4 women) was 65.8 years (range, 26-80 years). ⋯ Clinical follow-up (mean, 25.5 months) was available for 13 patients: 9 died of disease within 24 months after the diagnosis (mean, 17.6 months), 1 was alive with metastatic disease at 19 months, and 3 were free of disease. Overall survival of these patients with invasive micropapillary SDC was significantly shorter than that of patients with conventional SDC (n = 49) in our series (P = 0.031). Our results suggest that invasive micropapillary SDC is a distinct, aggressive variant of SDC, with a propensity for extensive lymph node metastasis and rapid disease progression.