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Lipofibromatosis

Lipofibromatosis is a rare, recurrent pediatric soft tissue tumor, often affecting the hands and feet. It features a mix of mature fat, short fascicles of bland spindle cells, and lipoblast-like cells at the interface of the spindle cell and lipomatous components.

Symptoms & Causes

Introduction

Lipofibromatosis is a rare, benign tumor that primarily occurs in children and has a tendency to recur. It is commonly found in the hands and feet and is composed of a mixture of mature fat cells, spindle cells, and lipoblast-like cells.

Reference
WHO Classification of Tumours Editorial Board. Soft tissue and bone tumours [Internet]. Lyon (France): International Agency for Research on Cancer; 2020 [cited 2024 09 11]. (WHO classification of tumours series, 5th ed.; vol. 3). Available from: https://tumourclassification.iarc.who.int/chapters/33.

Related Terminology
Not recommended: infantile/juvenile fibromatosis variant (non-desmoid type).

Subtype(s)
None

Symptoms

Lipofibromatosis typically presents as a slow-growing, poorly demarcated subcutaneous mass, which can also involve skeletal muscle.

Localization

Lipofibromatosis preferentially involves the hands and feet, although it can also occur at other locations such as the trunk and the head and neck.

Epidemiology

Lipofibromatosis occurs in children from birth to early in the second decade of life, with a male-to-female ratio of 2:1. Half of the cases are diagnosed by the age of 1 year, and 20% are congenital.

Etiology

Unknown

Diagnosis & Treatment

Staging

Not clinically relevant

Pathogenesis

Identification of fusions involving ligands (EGF, HBEGF, TGF-α) to EGFR (HER1) or EGFR itself, or other receptor tyrosine kinases (ROS1, RET, PDGFRB), suggests that activation of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway might be implicated in the pathogenesis of lipofibromatosis.

Macroscopic appearance

The firm, rubbery, poorly demarcated mass has a white or yellow cut surface; margins are difficult to discern. Most lesions are 1–7 cm in diameter, although larger tumors have been reported, with some involving the entire extremity.

Histopathology

Lipofibromatosis is composed of mature adipose tissue traversed by cellular fascicles of spindle cells with bland, uniform, elongated nuclei. Fat usually forms a major proportion of the lesion. In newborn patients, the fat lobules may have an immature appearance with myxoid matrix. Small collections of univacuolated cells may be present in the fibroblastic component, where melanin-laden cells have occasionally been documented. Lipofibromatosis entraps subcutaneous tissue and sometimes skeletal muscle. Mitotic activity is rare and necrosis absent. Occasional recurrent lesions are indistinguishable from calcifying aponeurotic fibroma. By immunohistochemistry, the fibroblasts show variable expression of CD34 and SMA. The spindle cells are negative for desmin, in contrast to the spindle cells in lipoblastoma.

Cytology

FNA smears show bland-appearing fibroblasts and mature fat.

Prognosis and prediction

Lipofibromatosis has a 70% local recurrence rate but no metastatic potential. Congenital onset, male sex, acral location, mitotic activity in the fibroblastic component, and incomplete excision may be risk factors for recurrence.

Clinical Features

Diagnostic molecular pathology

Not clinically relevant

Essential and desirable diagnostic criteria

Essential: painless subcutaneous mass; most often in the hands and feet of young children; admixture of mature fat, short fascicles of bland spindle cells, and lipoblast-like cells; infiltrative margins.

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