Nerve sheath myxoma

Definition

This neoplasm is a type of nerve sheath tumour. It has been argued that this entity is distinct from neurothekeoma.

Epidemiology

These tumours occur over a wide age range, including children.

Clinical features

Tumours occur at a wide range of anatomical sites, with a predilection for the limbs, particularly for the fingers and around the knee. They are slow-growing.

Macroscopic appearances

Most tumours are not more than 2.5 cm in diameter at the time of resection.

Histopathology

The tumour occurs in the dermis and/or subcutis, rarely involving skeletal muscle. The tumour has a multinodular architecture surrounded by dense fibrous tissue. Cystic change may occur. The matrix consists of myxoid material with scanty collagen. Within the myxoid matrix, epithelioid Schwann cells form cords, nests or syncytial sheets. Some of these cells may have cytoplasmic invaginations giving a resemblance to adipocytes. Rarely, the nuclei show palisading. There may be a sparse lymphocytic infiltrate. The mitotic rate is low.

Immunohistochemistry

 

S-100

40/401

 

GFAP

19/191

CD57

8/111

NSE

4/51

Cytokeratin cocktail (AE1/AE3 and LP 34)

6/18 showed positivity of infrequent cells1

EMA

14/20 showed positivity of a few cells mainly at the periphery of tumour nodules1

Muscle Specific Actin

2/8 showed positivity of a few cells1

Neurofilament

2/10 showed positivity of rare cells1

Factor XIIIa

0/81

HMB45

0/81

SMA

0/91

Desmin

0/61

CEA

0/41

CD68

0/11

CD31

0/11

Synaptophysin

0/11

Chromogranin

0/11

   

Differential diagnosis

Pre-operative clinical impressions may included epidermal inclusion cyst, ganglion cyst, bursa, tenosynovial giant cell tumor, traumatic neuroma, neurofibroma, Schwannoma, fatty tumor, fibrous histiocytoma, xanthoma, pyogenic granuloma and naevus.

Management

Ideally, excision needs to be complete with a margin of normal tissue to reduce the likelihood of recurrence.

Prognosis

Local recurrences are common, particularly on the fingers.

References

1 Fetsch JF, Laskin WB,Miettinen M. Nerve sheath myxoma: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical analysis of 57 morphologically distinctive, S-100 protein- and GFAP-positive, myxoid peripheral nerve sheath tumors with a predilection for the extremities and a high local recurrence rate. Am J Surg Pathol 2005; 29:1615-24

This page last revised 29.7.2006.

©SMUHT/PW Bishop