Turkish Journal of Pathology

Türk Patoloji Dergisi

Turkish Journal of Pathology

Turkish Journal of Pathology

2012, Vol 28, Num, 1     (Pages: 090-094)

Carcinosarcoma of the Lung Associated with Neurofibromatosis Type 1: A Case Report

Rana ÇİTİL 1, Harun ÇIRALIK 2, Ahmet KARSLIGİL 3, Pembe OLTULU 1, Derya YENİBERTİZ 4, Hamide Sayar 2, Esma Gürbüz 2

1 Department of Pathology, Kahramanmaraş State Hospital, KAHRAMANMARAŞ, TURKEY
2 Department of Pathology, Sütçü İmam University, Faculty of Medicine, KAHRAMANMARAŞ, TURKEY
3 Department of Thoracic Surgery, Kahramanmaraş State Hospital, KAHRAMANMARAŞ, TURKEY
4 Department of Chest Diseases, Kahramanmaraş State Hospital, KAHRAMANMARAŞ, TURKEY

DOI: 10.5146/tjpath.2012.01106
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Summary

Neurofibromatosis or von Recklinghausen's disease is the most common inherited syndrome predisposing to neoplasia. Carcinosarcoma is a rare malignant mixed tumor of the lung. Association of carcinosarcoma of lung with Neurofibromatosis-1 is not common. A 57-year-old man presented with history of fever, cough, hemoptysis, breathlessness, weight loss, chest pain. Multiple cutaneous neurofibromas and café au lait spots were revealed by physical examination. A homogeneous opacity was found in the right middle and right upper zone on posterior-anterior chest radiography. A 8x8x7 cm mass that had irregular borders in right upper posterior and apical segment was seen on contrast enhanced chest computed tomography. On bronchoscopy, the lumen of right upper apical segment was obstructed with vegetating tumoral lesion. The biopsy taken from this region was diagnosed as carcinosarcoma by histopathological and immunohistochemical examination.A rare case with carcinosarcoma of the lung and Neurofibromatosis-1 was reported.

Introduction

Von Recklinghausen's disease is an autosomal dominant hereditary disease associated with characteristic cafe au lait spots of the skin and multiple neurofibromatosis. Clinical and genetic studies have demonstrated the existence of two distinct genetic forms of neurofibromatosis. The classical or peripheral form of the disease, also known as neurofibromatosis type-1 (NF-I), accounts for 85% of all cases[1]. Patients with NF1 are predisposed to development of various types of malignancies. There might be also an increased risk for the development of primary lung carcinoma[2]. However, the incidence of lung carcinoma occurring as a complication of NF-1 is rare. Recently, lung malignancies reported in association with neurofibromatosis have been reported infrequently[3-7]. Carcinosarcoma of the lung is a rare tumor, constitutes approximately 0.2-0.27% of all lung cancers, and has a poor clinical outcome[8]. The tumor may be located in several organs such as the esophagus, salivary glands, thymus, thyroid glands, breast, stomach, urogenital system as well as in the lungs[9,10].We specifically presented this case because of the rare association of neurofibromatosis and carcinosarcoma of the lung.

Case Presentation

A 57-year-old man applied with history of fever for 2 months and cough, hemoptysis, breathlessness, weight loss, chest pain for 1 month. He was a life-time nonsmoker, and he had been diagnosed previously as neurofibromatosis. Multiple cutaneous neurofibromas and café-au-lait spots were revealed by physical examination. In bronchoscopic examination,the lumen of the right upper apical segment was obstructed by a vegetan tumoral lesion. It was determined homogeneous opacity in the right middle and right upper zone on posterior-anterior chest radiography (Figure 1). On admission, a 8 x 8 x7 cm mass that have irregular border in right upper posterior and apical segment was seen on contrast enhanced chest computed tomography. There was necrosis and multicystic areas within the mass. Minimal pleural effusion was also noted (Figure 2).

Figure 1: Chest roentgenogram showed a irregular homogeneus opacity in right middle and right upper zone.

Figure 2: 8x8x7 cm mass that have irregular border in right upper posterior and apical segment was seen on contrast enhanced chest computed tomography.

Grossly, the skin specimen was ovoid, ten-white mass, measuring 1x1x0.7cm. The cut surface was solid and white-gray. Histologically, the tumor contained interlacing bundles of elongated cells with wavy, darkly stained nuclei in the subcutis. The cells were immunoreactive for S-100. The melanin pigment was increased in the basal layer of the epidermis, suggestive of cafe-au-lait spots (Figure 3A-C).

Figure 3: A) Neurofibroma with interlacing bundles of elongated cells in the subcutaneous region (H&E, x40). B) Café-au-lait spots are characterized by an increase in melanin pigment in the basal layer of the epidermis (H&E, x200). C) S-100 protein immunostaining of a neurofibroma (x100).

Cytological examination of pleural fluid revealed atypical cells in small clusters showing marked degenerative changes.

The excised section was reddish-gray and had a wide area covered with hemorrhage and necrosis on the lung specimen. The histological examination demonstrated a tumor composed of malignant epithelial components admixed with mesenchymal component. The carcinomatous component was consistent with squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma. The sarcomatous component was characterized by interlacing fascicles or storiform growth pattern consisting of fusiform or spindle-shaped cells. The nuclei were more pleomorphic with numerous mitotic figures, and there were areas of necrosis and hemorrhage. Multinucleated giant cells of bizarre size and shape were seen (Figure 4, 5). No heterologous component such as bone, cartilage, or muscle was observed in the sarcomatous component. In immunohistochemical examination, all carcinomatous components were immunoreactive for pancytokeratin, cytokeratin 19 and epithelial membrane antigen (EMA). The sarcomatous component was positive for vimentin but not with pancytokeratin, cytokeratin 19, actin and EMA (Figure 6A-D). All other markers including desmin, cytokeratin 5/6, thyroid transcriptional factor-1, and chromogranin were negative. On the basis of these findings, the patient was diagnosed to have a carcinosarcoma. Four months after the diagnosis, he died of systemic progression of tumor.

Figure 4: Mixed composition of carcinosarcoma; squamous cell carcinoma component, adenocarcinoma and sarcoma component (H&E, x40).

Figure 5: Sarcomatous component; multinucleated giant cells and pleomorphic bizarre nuclei (H&E, x40).

Figure 6: Carcinomatous component immunoreactive for A) pancytokeratin (x10) and B) epithelial membrane antigen (100x). The sarcomatous component stained with C) vimentin, D) whereas not on carcinomatous component (x100).

Discussion

The NF-1 gene is located on the long arm of chromosome 17 which functions as a tumour supressor gene. It is a negative regulator of RAS oncogene. Mutation of NF-1 gene causes von Recklinghausen's disease. Its cardinal features are café-au-lait macules and multiple neurofibromas[1,11]. It is now known to be at least two clinically and genetically distinct diseases. The more common disease, formerly known as the peripheral form of neurofibromatosis, is designated NF-1. The less common disease, formerly known as the central form, is designated neurofibromatosis 2 (NF2)(bilateral vestibular schwannomas)[12]. The risk of the cancer developing is four times greater than general population[13]. Various cancers are known that occur in these patients including benign neurofibromas, intracranial gliomas, malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors, malignant schwannoma, neurofibrosarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, juvenile chronic myelomonocytic leukemia, and pheochromocytoma[2,14]. Pulmonary involvement in NF-1 occurs in up to 20% of the case. The most common pulmonary manifestations are fibrosis and thin-walled bullae formation, predominantly in the upper zones[11,15]. However, the association of primary lung carcinoma with NF-1 is not common (%2-5)[16].

The reported histological types of lung carcinoma are adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, small cell carcinoma, large cell carcinoma, poorly differentiated carcinoma and metastatic lung carcinoma with neurofibromatosis[3-7,17]. Japanese review reported only 11 cases of NF-1 with primary lung carcinoma until 1992. Adenocarcinoma was the most frequent histologic diagnosis (72.9%) in this report as well as in most of the recent surveys of lung cancer in Japanese population[7]. Lung carcinosarcoma is a rare malignancy with a poor prognosis. It accounts for 0.2-0.27 % of primary pulmonary malignancies[8].

As defined in the 2004 WHO criteria, there are five recognized subgroups representing a morphologic continuum: pleomorphic carcinoma, spindle cell carcinoma, giant cell carcinoma, carcinosarcoma, and pulmonary blastoma.

This variant is defined as a malignant tumour with a mixture of carcinoma and sarcoma containing differentiated sarcomatous elements. The carcinomatous component is most often squamous cell carcinoma (45-70 %), followed by adenocarcinoma (20-31%), and large cell carcinoma (10%). The malignant stroma often forms the bulk of carcinosarcomas, and only small foci of carcinoma may be seen[18]. Koss et all reported that carcinosarcomas show a male-to-female ratio of 7.25:1, with a mean and median age of 65 years. They most often present as solitary masses in the upper lobes and average 7 cm in diameter. Most (62%) were endobronchial or central tumors, whereas 38% were described as peripheral[19].

The most frequent symptoms were, chest pain, cough, hemoptysis, wheezing, dyspnea, fever and weight loss, in previous reports[20]

In several immunohistochemical examinations, the sarcomatous component was positive for vimentin, the carcinomatous component was positive for cytokeratin and EMA[21,22].

In conclusion, carcinosarcoma is a rare tumor of the lung and association of carcinosarcoma with NF-1 is not common.

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Keywords : Neurofibromatosis 1, Carcinosarcoma, Lung