4.4 Article

Cellular variant of kaposiform lymphangiomatosis: a report of three cases, expanding the morphologic and molecular genetic spectrum of this rare entity

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HUMAN PATHOLOGY
卷 122, 期 -, 页码 72-81

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W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.humpath.2022.02.010

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Pediatric neoplasms; Vascular tumors; Kaposiform lymphangio-matosis; Kaposiform hemangioen-dothelioma; Lymphatic anomalies

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Kaposiform lymphangiomatosis (KLA) is a rare disease that mainly affects children and young adults. It shares some cellular features with kaposiform hemangioendothelioma (KHE), but the two diseases have significant clinical, morphologic, and genetic differences.
Kaposiform lymphangiomatosis (KLA) is a very rare form of generalized lymphatic anomaly, consisting of a diffuse proliferation of abnormal, dilated lymphatics, and small fascicles of hemosiderin-laden spindled lymphatic endothelial cells. KLA occurs in children and young adults and may present with multicentric disease, pleural and pericardial effusions, and life-threatening coagulopathy. Genetically, KLA most often harbors somatic activating mutations in NRAS. We recently encountered 3 cases of KLA with cellular features, resembling kaposiform hemangioendothelioma (KHE), and studied their clinicopathologic, radiologic, and molecular genetic features. The patients (1 male, 2 females; aged 2 years, 2 months, 4 years) presented with multicentric disease involving skin, soft tissue, bone, and spleen and thrombocytopenia/coagulopathy. Advanced imaging studies confirmed multicentric disease. Biopsies (skin, soft tissue, bone, and spleen) demonstrated both conventional KLA and much more cellular foci, consisting of sheets, nodules, glomeruloid structures, and sieve-like arrays of lymphatic endothelial cells (positive for CD31 and D2-40). Cellular areas superficially resembled KHE but displayed more epithelioid cytology and lacked surrounding hyaline fibrosis and minute platelet aggregates. Molecular genetic studies demonstrated NRAS c.181C > A p.Q61K (Gln61Lys) in 2 specimens from one patient and HRAS p.A59_Q61delinsGGSIL in another. Two patients were treated with sirolimus; all are currently alive with stable disease. We conclude that cellular morphology in KLA, a previously undescribed feature, does not appear to be associated with clinical features, site of disease, mutation type, response to sirolimus, or outcome. Although cellular KLA may mimic KHE, there are sufficient clinical, morphologic, and genetic differences such that these are likely unrelated diseases. (c) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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