Schwannomas occur most often in the stomach but also in the oesophagus and colorectum, rarely in the small intestine. They account for about 3% of gastrointestinal mesenchymal tumours.
These tumours occur over a wide age range.
Most tumours are located in the muscularis propria.
The tumours are non-encapsulated . In most cases they are well circumscribed but some tumours merge with the surrounding smooth muscle. There is a surrounding lymphoid cuff which may include germinal centres: this seems to be a distinctive feature. The tumour cells are spindled, in some cases with foci of epithelioid cells. There are rare epithelioid and plexiform variants. Nuclear palisading is vague or absent: this observation has also been made on those nerve sheath tumours occurring with the mucosa.
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The spindle cells have interdigitating processes. A basement membrane surrounds many of the cell processes.
GIST: positive for CD117, CD34 and nestin but negative for GFAP.
Leiomyomas: positive for muscle markers.
Microcystic/reticular Schwannoma: most commonly found in the gastrointestinal tract: shows a predominance of a characteristic microcystic or reticualr pattern of cells around myxoid stroma.
These tumours are almost always benign.
This page last revised 10.4.2006.
©SMUHT/PW Bishop