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Malignant Mesenchymal Tumors

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Malignant Mesenchymal Tumors Fibrosarcoma Malignancy of fibroblastic differentiation Usually affects adults May present as a soft tissue mass or as an intrabony ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Malignant Mesenchymal Tumors


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Malignant Mesenchymal Tumors
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Fibrosarcoma
  • Malignancy of fibroblastic differentiation
  • Usually affects adults
  • May present as a soft tissue mass or as an
    intrabony lesion

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Fibrosarcoma
  • Wide to radical surgical excision
  • Like many soft tissue sarcomas, little response
    to radiation or chemotherapy
  • 50 five-year survival
  • Metastasizes to lung, bone, liver

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Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumor
  • Also known as neurogenic sarcoma or
    neurofibrosarcoma
  • May arise spontaneously or in association with
    neurofibromatosis

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Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumor
  • Invasive cellular proliferation of spindle-shaped
    cells with wavy nuclei
  • Similar appearance with routine hematoxylin and
    eosin-stained sections to several other tumors
  • Typically MPNST shows S-100 positivity

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Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumor
  • Treatment consists of radical surgical excision
  • With sporadic cases (not associated with
    NFtosis) 50 five-year survival
  • With cases developing in the setting of NFtosis
    10 five-year survival

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Kaposi Sarcoma
  • First described by Moritz Kaposi in the late 19th
    century as a disease affecting elderly white
    males of Mediterranean descent
  • Subsequently identified in sub-Saharan Africans,
    transplant recipients and HIV males
  • Most investigators feel that HHV-8 plays a
    causative role

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Kaposi Sarcoma
  • The so-called classic form of KS usually
    appears on the lower extremities
  • Initially purple macules develop into plaques
    and, eventually, tumors

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Kaposi Sarcoma
  • African form of KS usually involves the lymph
    nodes (lymphadenopathic KS)
  • Affects a wide age range of patients, including
    children

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Kaposi Sarcoma
  • Transplant-associated KS usually affects the skin
    of a small percentage (1-2) of these patients
  • May affect the oral mucosa
  • Reducing the degree of immune suppression may
    cause regression of KS

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Kaposi Sarcoma
  • AIDS-related KS overwhelming affects gay or
    bisexual men
  • Rare examples have been seen in women
  • Frequency has been declining, from 25 at onset
    of the epidemic to 10 today
  • Of the patients who develop AIDS-KS, 50 will
    have oral lesions

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Kaposi Sarcoma
  • Management may include excision for small
    cosmetically unacceptable lesions
  • Radiation therapy
  • Injections with vinblastine, a cancer
    chemotherapeutic drug

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Kaposi Sarcoma - Prognosis
  • Classic fair. Patients usually die of
    something else (MI, CVA, etc.)
  • Lymphadenopathic poor. Very aggressive course
  • Transplant-associated fair-poor. May regress
    with decreased immune suppression
  • AIDS-related fair.

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Rhabdomyosarcoma
  • Relatively rare neoplasm of skeletal muscle
    differentiation
  • Usually affects children or adolescents
  • Head and neck is a common site of involvement
  • Infiltrative, rapidly growing mass

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Rhabdomyosarcoma
  • When rhabdomyosarcoma grows into a body cavity,
    such as the oral cavity or the vagina, the lesion
    develops an appearance similar to a bunch of
    grapes, thus the term sarcoma botryoides

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Rhabdomyosarcoma
  • Treated with multiple modalities
  • Wide surgical excision combined with radiation
    therapy and chemotherapy
  • Prognosis depends on the stage
  • Much improved outlook compared with 30 years ago

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Leukemia
  • Group of hematologic malignancies characterized
    by tumor cells circulating in the blood
  • Broadly divided into lymphocytic and
    myelomonocytic types
  • Further divided into acute and chronic forms

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Leukemia
  • Examples would include
  • Acute lymphocytic leukemia
  • Chronic lymphocytic leukemia
  • Acute myelomonocytic leukemia
  • Chronic myelomonocytic leukemia

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Leukemia
  • Patients often present with signs and symptoms
    related to myelophthisic anemia (normal bone
    marrow cells replaced by leukemic cells)
  • Fatigue, SOB, pallor (decreased RBCs)
  • Easy bruising (decreased platelets)
  • Infection (decreased WBCs)

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Leukemia
  • Oral involvement is seen most frequently in the
    myelomonocytic forms of leukemia
  • Focal proliferation of leukemic cells at one soft
    tissue site may be seen granulocytic sarcoma
  • Diffuse gingival enlargement

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Leukemia
  • This diagnosis is usually based on finding
    increased numbers of atypical WBCs in the
    circulation, and the type of leukemia is
    determined by immunohistochemical and cytogenetic
    studies
  • If the gingival enlargement caused by leukemia is
    biopsied, an infiltrate of atypical cells is seen

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Leukemia -Treatment
  • Chemotherapy
  • Bone marrow or stem cell transplantation
  • Targeted gene therapy experimental, but
    promising

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Lymphoma
  • Malignancy of lymphoid cells
  • Usually divided into Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin
    forms
  • Hodgkin lymphoma develops in the lymph nodes
  • Non-Hodgkin lymphoma may develop in nodes, soft
    tissue or bone

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Hodgkin Lymphoma
  • Usually affects teenagers and young adults
    7,600 cases in US in 2003
  • Head and neck is common site of initial
    involvement
  • One or more rubbery-firm, enlarging, non-tender
    lymph nodes

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Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma
  • Tends to affect an older age group than Hodgkin
    lymphoma, and is much more common 53,400 cases
    in US in 2003
  • Most present in the lymph nodes, but 30-40 are
    extranodal

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Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma
  • Oral involvement of soft tissue is usually seen
    as a diffuse mass of the soft palate or the
    buccal vestibule
  • Mandibular involvement may be associated with
    numb chin sign
  • Moth-eaten or ill-defined radiolucency seen
    radiographically

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Lymphoma - Treatment
  • Localized disease radiation therapy, with or
    without chemotherapy
  • More generalized disease - chemotherapy

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Lymphoma - Prognosis
  • Hodgkin lymphoma good, with many series
    reporting a 95 10-year survival rate
  • Non-Hodgkin lymphoma has a much more variable
    prognosis, depending on the grade and stage of
    disease

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Lymphoma - Prognosis
  • Hodgkin lymphoma 1,300 deaths in 2003
  • Non-Hodgkin lymphoma 23,400 deaths in 2003
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