Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CONTRIBUTORS
- PREFACE
- Chap 1 OVERVIEW OF SOFT TISSUE TUMORS
- Chap 2 RADIOLOGIC EVALUATION OF SOFT TISSUE TUMORS
- Chap 3 IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY OF SOFT TISSUE TUMORS
- Chap 4 GENETICS OF SOFT TISSUE TUMORS
- Chap 5 MOLECULAR GENETICS OF SOFT TISSUE TUMORS
- Chap 6 FIBROBLAST BIOLOGY, FASCIITIS, RETROPERITONEAL FIBROSIS, AND KELOIDS
- Chap 7 FIBROMAS AND BENIGN FIBROUS HISTIOCYTOMAS
- Chap 8 FIBROMATOSES
- Chap 9 BENIGN FIBROBLASTIC AND MYOFIBROBLASTIC PROLIFERATIONS IN CHILDREN
- Chap 10 CHILDHOOD FIBROBLASTIC AND MYOFIBROBLASTIC PROLIFERATIONS OF VARIABLE BIOLOGIC POTENTIAL
- Chap 11 MYXOMAS AND OSSIFYING FIBROMYXOID TUMOR
- Chap 12 SOLITARY FIBROUS TUMOR, HEMANGIOPERICYTOMA, AND RELATED TUMORS
- Chap 13 FIBROBLASTIC AND MYOFIBROBLASTIC NEOPLASMS WITH MALIGNANT POTENTIAL
- Chap 14 LIPOMA VARIANTS AND CONDITIONS SIMULATING LIPOMATOUS TUMORS
- Chap 15 ATYPICAL LIPOMATOUS TUMOR AND LIPOSARCOMAS
- Chap 16 SMOOTH MUSCLE TUMORS
- Chap 17 GASTROINTESTINAL STROMAL TUMOR
- Chap 18 STROMAL TUMORS AND TUMOR-LIKE LESIONS OF THE FEMALE GENITAL TRACT
- Chap 19 ANGIOMYOLIPOMA AND RELATED TUMORS (PERIVASCULAR EPITHELIOID CELL TUMORS)
- Chap 20 RHABDOMYOMAS AND RHABDOMYOSARCOMAS
- Chap 21 HEMANGIOMAS, LYMPHANGIOMAS, AND REACTIVE VASCULAR PROLIFERATIONS
- Chap 22 HEMANGIOENDOTHELIOMAS, ANGIOSARCOMAS, AND KAPOSI'S SARCOMA
- Chap 23 GLOMUS TUMOR, SINONASAL HEMANGIOPERICYTOMA, AND MYOPERICYTOMA
- Chap 24 NERVE SHEATH TUMORS
- Chap 25 NEUROECTODERMAL TUMORS: MELANOCYTIC, GLIAL, AND MENINGEAL NEOPLASMS
- Chap 26 PARAGANGLIOMAS
- Chap 27 PRIMARY SOFT TISSUE TUMORS WITH EPITHELIAL DIFFERENTIATION
- Chap 28 MALIGNANT MESOTHELIOMA AND OTHER MESOTHELIAL PROLIFERATIONS
- Chap 29 MERKEL CELL CARCINOMA AND METASTATIC AND SARCOMATOID CARCINOMAS INVOLVING SOFT TISSUE
- Chap 30 CARTILAGE- AND BONE-FORMING TUMORS AND TUMOR-LIKE LESIONS
- Chap 31 SMALL ROUND CELL TUMORS
- Chap 32 ALVEOLAR SOFT PART SARCOMA
- Chap 33 PATHOLOGY OF SYNOVIA AND TENDONS
- Chap 34 MISCELLANEOUS TUMOR-LIKE LESIONS, AND HISTIOCYTIC AND FOREIGN BODY REACTIONS
- Chap 35 LYMPHOID, MYELOID, HISTIOCYTIC, AND DENDRITIC CELL PROLIFERATIONS IN SOFT TISSUES
- Chap 36 CYTOLOGY OF SOFT TISSUE LESIONS
- Chap 37 SURGICAL MANAGEMENT OF SOFT TISSUE SARCOMA: HISTOLOGIC TYPE AND GRADE GUIDE SURGICAL PLANNING AND INTEGRATION OF MULTIMODALITY THERAPY
- Chap 38 MEDICAL ONCOLOGY OF SOFT TISSUE SARCOMAS
- Index
- References
Chap 32 - ALVEOLAR SOFT PART SARCOMA
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CONTRIBUTORS
- PREFACE
- Chap 1 OVERVIEW OF SOFT TISSUE TUMORS
- Chap 2 RADIOLOGIC EVALUATION OF SOFT TISSUE TUMORS
- Chap 3 IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY OF SOFT TISSUE TUMORS
- Chap 4 GENETICS OF SOFT TISSUE TUMORS
- Chap 5 MOLECULAR GENETICS OF SOFT TISSUE TUMORS
- Chap 6 FIBROBLAST BIOLOGY, FASCIITIS, RETROPERITONEAL FIBROSIS, AND KELOIDS
- Chap 7 FIBROMAS AND BENIGN FIBROUS HISTIOCYTOMAS
- Chap 8 FIBROMATOSES
- Chap 9 BENIGN FIBROBLASTIC AND MYOFIBROBLASTIC PROLIFERATIONS IN CHILDREN
- Chap 10 CHILDHOOD FIBROBLASTIC AND MYOFIBROBLASTIC PROLIFERATIONS OF VARIABLE BIOLOGIC POTENTIAL
- Chap 11 MYXOMAS AND OSSIFYING FIBROMYXOID TUMOR
- Chap 12 SOLITARY FIBROUS TUMOR, HEMANGIOPERICYTOMA, AND RELATED TUMORS
- Chap 13 FIBROBLASTIC AND MYOFIBROBLASTIC NEOPLASMS WITH MALIGNANT POTENTIAL
- Chap 14 LIPOMA VARIANTS AND CONDITIONS SIMULATING LIPOMATOUS TUMORS
- Chap 15 ATYPICAL LIPOMATOUS TUMOR AND LIPOSARCOMAS
- Chap 16 SMOOTH MUSCLE TUMORS
- Chap 17 GASTROINTESTINAL STROMAL TUMOR
- Chap 18 STROMAL TUMORS AND TUMOR-LIKE LESIONS OF THE FEMALE GENITAL TRACT
- Chap 19 ANGIOMYOLIPOMA AND RELATED TUMORS (PERIVASCULAR EPITHELIOID CELL TUMORS)
- Chap 20 RHABDOMYOMAS AND RHABDOMYOSARCOMAS
- Chap 21 HEMANGIOMAS, LYMPHANGIOMAS, AND REACTIVE VASCULAR PROLIFERATIONS
- Chap 22 HEMANGIOENDOTHELIOMAS, ANGIOSARCOMAS, AND KAPOSI'S SARCOMA
- Chap 23 GLOMUS TUMOR, SINONASAL HEMANGIOPERICYTOMA, AND MYOPERICYTOMA
- Chap 24 NERVE SHEATH TUMORS
- Chap 25 NEUROECTODERMAL TUMORS: MELANOCYTIC, GLIAL, AND MENINGEAL NEOPLASMS
- Chap 26 PARAGANGLIOMAS
- Chap 27 PRIMARY SOFT TISSUE TUMORS WITH EPITHELIAL DIFFERENTIATION
- Chap 28 MALIGNANT MESOTHELIOMA AND OTHER MESOTHELIAL PROLIFERATIONS
- Chap 29 MERKEL CELL CARCINOMA AND METASTATIC AND SARCOMATOID CARCINOMAS INVOLVING SOFT TISSUE
- Chap 30 CARTILAGE- AND BONE-FORMING TUMORS AND TUMOR-LIKE LESIONS
- Chap 31 SMALL ROUND CELL TUMORS
- Chap 32 ALVEOLAR SOFT PART SARCOMA
- Chap 33 PATHOLOGY OF SYNOVIA AND TENDONS
- Chap 34 MISCELLANEOUS TUMOR-LIKE LESIONS, AND HISTIOCYTIC AND FOREIGN BODY REACTIONS
- Chap 35 LYMPHOID, MYELOID, HISTIOCYTIC, AND DENDRITIC CELL PROLIFERATIONS IN SOFT TISSUES
- Chap 36 CYTOLOGY OF SOFT TISSUE LESIONS
- Chap 37 SURGICAL MANAGEMENT OF SOFT TISSUE SARCOMA: HISTOLOGIC TYPE AND GRADE GUIDE SURGICAL PLANNING AND INTEGRATION OF MULTIMODALITY THERAPY
- Chap 38 MEDICAL ONCOLOGY OF SOFT TISSUE SARCOMAS
- Index
- References
Summary
This rare, histologically distinctive, and histogenetically enigmatic sarcoma with a compartmental pattern, having a predilection for children and young adults, originally was described by Christopherson, Foote, and Stewart in Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in 1952. Previously this tumor was often considered a peripheral example of a nonchromaffin paraganglioma or an organoid variant of malignant granular cell tumor. There is no normal cell counterpart known to this tumor.
CLINICAL FEATURES OF ALVEOLAR SOFT PART SARCOMA IN SOFT TISSUE
Alveolar soft part sarcoma (ASPS) is a very rare tumor, constituting <1% of all soft tissue sarcomas (0.8%–0.9%) in two tertiary center series, including one from a large cancer hospital. Based on Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (AFIP) statistics from >250 patients, 39% of the cases occur in patients younger than the age of 20 years. Childhood examples have a female predominance, whereas those in the adults >30 years have a predilection for men (Fig. 32.1), as was previously observed in one series.
ASPS occurs in a wide variety of soft tissue locations (Fig. 33.2). Based on AFIP data, more than one third of patients present with tumors in the lower extremity, especially the thigh and buttock. Childhood tumors are more common in the head and neck (especially tongue) and upper extremity, whereas examples in adults occur more often in the lower extremity and trunk wall. Ten percent of adult cases occur in visceral locations, most commonly in the gynecologic tract.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Modern Soft Tissue PathologyTumors and Non-Neoplastic Conditions, pp. 930 - 938Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010