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Cystic retroperitoneal dedifferentiated liposarcoma: A case report
*Corresponding author: Sara Sorour, Department of Radiology and Diagnostic Imaging, University of Alberta, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Edmonton, Canada. doc.sara.samy@gmail.com
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Received: ,
Accepted: ,
How to cite this article: Sorour S, Bao B, Wilson MP, Low G. Cystic retroperitoneal dedifferentiated liposarcoma: A case report. J Clin Imaging Sci 2023;13:22.
Abstract
Liposarcoma is the most common primary retroperitoneal sarcoma in adults. We report the case of an 86-year-old male who presented to the emergency department with frequent falls and unexplained weight loss that was found to have a cystic retroperitoneal dedifferentiated liposarcoma. Initial computed tomography revealed a large heterogeneous complex cystic hypoenhancing lesion in the left retroperitoneum. Subsequent magnetic resonance imaging demonstrates a multilocular cystic mass with microscopic lipid content, diffusion restriction, and enhancing nodular soft-tissue components. Histologic examination of the tissue sample following biopsy is consistent with cystic retroperitoneal dedifferentiated liposarcoma. Further management was not pursued due to the patient’s advanced age and frailty.
Keywords
Retroperitoneal neoplasms
Sarcoma
Liposarcoma
Hemorrhage
INTRODUCTION
Liposarcoma is a malignant tumor of adipose tissue and is the most common primary retroperitoneal sarcoma. Liposarcomas can be histologically divided into four subtypes including well-differentiated liposarcoma, myxoid liposarcoma, pleomorphic liposarcoma, and dedifferentiated liposarcoma.[1] The most common of these seen in the retroperitoneum are well-differentiated liposarcoma and dedifferentiated liposarcoma. Dedifferentiation liposarcomas are high-grade sarcomas and are more clinically aggressive than the well-differentiated subtype.[2] Cystic change in dedifferentiated liposarcoma is a very rare phenomenon. To date, only a few cases of cystic retroperitoneal dedifferentiated liposarcomas have been reported.[3-5] Herein, we describe a case of cystic retroperitoneal dedifferentiated liposarcoma complicated by hemorrhage.
CASE REPORT
An 86-year-old male presented to the emergency department complaining of acute shortness of breath as well as background unexplained weight loss over several months. The patient also reported recent high-impact falls which led to a right femoral subcapital fracture that was treated by right hip hemiarthroplasty in the preceding few months. Clinical assessment revealed peripheral edema and hypoxia but no fever, night sweats, or constitutional symptoms. Laboratory assessment showed increased serum alkaline phosphatase and D-dimer levels. While hemoglobin has been chronically low for months, there was no acute decline to suggest recent hemorrhage. The remaining blood work including white cell count, neutrophil count, and C-reactive protein was normal. The initial chest radiograph was unremarkable.
A contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) scan of the abdomen and pelvis was obtained which showed a large heterogeneous complex cystic hypoenhancing lesion in the left retroperitoneum posterior to the left kidney measuring 13 × 12 × 24 cm and demonstrating mixed density of 9–32 Hounsfield units [Figure 1]. The mass displaces the left kidney and encases the left renal vasculature and collecting system at the hilum leading to mild hydronephrosis. While the appearance of the mass is non-specific on CT, given the recent history of multiple falls, a complicated chronic hematoma was considered in the differential at the time. Subsequent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) demonstrates heterogeneous T2-weighted hyperintensity suggestive of multi-cystic areas within the mass [Figure 2]. Multiple areas of T1-weighted hyperintensity are also seen on the T1 fat saturated sequence suggestive of hemorrhagic content [Figure 2]. Chemical shift T1 imaging [Figure 3] demonstrates associated microscopic lipid content as denoted by signal loss on the out-of-phase image compared to the in-phase image in the superior cystic component of the mass [Figures 3a and 3b]. There is diffusion restriction in the periphery of the solid components of the mass [Figure 3d]. The solid components show avid enhancement in the post-contrast fat saturated T1 [Figure 4].
The findings on CT and MRI are most consistent with a large left retroperitoneal cystic neoplasm with internal hemorrhage of differing ages. Given the signal loss seen on the out-of-phase image [Figure 3b arrow], the first differential diagnosis considered is liposarcoma, followed by lymphoma or peripheral nerve sheath tumor. The patients underwent ultrasound-guided biopsy with subsequent pathology confirming a diagnosis of cystic retroperitoneal dedifferentiated liposarcoma. Given the advanced age and frailty of the patient, further management of this mass was not pursued.
DISCUSSION
Retroperitoneal sarcoma is rare with a mean incidence of 2.7/million though accounts for approximately 12–15% of all soft-tissue sarcomas.[6] They are frequently incidental findings on imaging for non-related symptoms or diseases. Liposarcoma is the most common primary retroperitoneal sarcoma with well-differentiated and dedifferentiated liposarcoma being the two predominant subtypes.[1] Dedifferentiated liposarcoma is a high-grade sarcoma demonstrating more aggressive behavior compared to well-differentiated liposarcoma with the propensity for local recurrence and metastasis.[2] The characteristic imaging appearance of dedifferentiated liposarcoma is a mass with coexisting fatty and non-fatty tissue, often by a focal nodular non-lipomatous component >1 cm in size. Calcifications can be seen and are a sign of poor prognosis.[7]
Predominant cystic change is uncommon in retroperitoneal liposarcoma; hence, radiologists may not consider primary cystic retroperitoneal liposarcoma in the differential diagnosis. To date, only a few case reports of predominantly cystic retroperitoneal liposarcoma have been published in the literature. In a 2017 report by Uchihashi et al., the authors described an elderly female who presented with a large cystic dedifferentiated liposarcoma without a solid component.[3] An additional case of cystic dedifferentiated liposarcoma was previously described by Khoury et al. in the setting of prior chemoradiation therapy.[4] The radiologic diagnosis of our case was difficult due to its large cystic component and non-specific appearance on CT. Given the patient history of frequent falls leading to recent right total hip arthroplasty, the heterogeneous appearance of the mass on CT makes hematoma a plausible differential diagnosis on the initial CT examination. The diagnosis of primary retroperitoneal neoplasm and more specifically liposarcoma was only made possible following MRI characterization.
Dedifferentiated liposarcomas represents the conversion of well-differentiated components to non-fat-derived tumor components and requires both lipogenic well-differentiated liposarcoma and cellular non-lipogenic sarcoma. However, well-differentiated and dedifferentiated liposarcomas share similar underlying genetic and histological characteristics including common genetic abnormalities with amplified sequences arising from the long arm of chromosome 12 (12q13-15), which includes amplifications of CDK4 and MDM2 cell cycle oncogenes.[8] These genetic and histological similarities contribute to a challenge in morphological differentiation of these tumors on imaging. The previous studies have investigated imaging features such as morphology of fat and non-fat components in liposarcomas. As shown in [Table 1], Rajiah et al. summarized the imaging features of different retroperitoneal masses.[9] Other imaging features described in both atypical lipomatous tumor/ well-differentiated liposarcoma includes large size of the lesion (more than 10 cm), thick irregular/nodular septa, non-adipose areas or nodules, and fat content involving <75% of the lesion. Other described imaging characteristics for distinguishing between well-differentiated and dedifferentiated liposarcomas include prominent foci of high signal on fluid sensitive sequences and septal enhancement, although these features are shown to have limited specificities.[10] To date, no combinations of imaging features are known to reliably differentiate between these lesions with definitive subtype diagnosis often requiring histological analysis following biopsy of the most suspicious portions of the lesion or even tumor resection.
Imaging feature | Diagnosis |
---|---|
Pure fat-containing mass | Lipoma, well-differentiated liposarcoma |
Heterogenous mass with fat | Dedifferentiated liposarcoma, myelolipoma, angiomyolipoma |
Fat-fluid level | Teratoma, well-differentiated liposarcoma |
Fat with calcification, teeth, or fluid | Teratoma |
Myxoid stroma | Myxoid liposarcoma, neurogenic tumor, myxoid malignant fibrous histiocytoma. Less common diagnosis: desmoid tumor, hemangiopericytoma, leiomyoma or leiomyosarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, malignant mesenchymoma. |
Large mass, extensive necrosis, invasion of IVC | Leiomyosarcoma |
Fluid-fluid level caused by hemorrhage | Paraganglioma |
Extremely hypervascular | Paraganglioma, hemangiopericytoma |
Moderately hypervascular | Myxoid malignant fibrous histiocytoma, leiomyosarcoma, other sarcoma |
Hypovacular | Lymphoma, low-grade liposarcoma, benign tumor |
T2 hypointenisty | Lymphoma, desmoid tumor, small round cell tumor, retroperitoneal fibrosis, Erdheim-Chester disease |
Paravertebral mass | Neurogenic tumor |
Paravertebral mass, high catecholamine levels, hypertension | Paraganglioma |
Extension between normal structures, encasement without luminal compression | lymphangioma, ganglioneuroma, lymphoma (gloating aorta or CT angiogram sign) |
Extension along normal structures | Paraganglioma, ganglioneuroma |
Mantlelike mass around aorta of IVC | Lymphoma, retroperitoneal fibrosis, Erdheim-Chester disease |
floating aorta or CT angiogram sign | Lymphoma |
Soft-tissue mass with calcification | Malignant fibrous histiocytoma, teratoma, extraosseous chondrosarcoma/Ewing sarcoma, synovial sarcoma, dedifferentiated liposarcoma |
Cystic mass with solid tumor enhancement | Myxoid liposarcoma, schwannoma, neurofibroma |
Cystic mass with slow, progressive enhancement | Lymphangioleiomyoma, urinoma |
Cystic mass with pulmonary cysts | Lymphangioleiomyoma |
Cyst after trauma | |
With high attenuation or intensity | Hematoma |
With obstruction | Urinoma |
Cyst wit negative attenuation, history of radical lymphadenectomy | Lymphocele |
Multilocular cystic mass, calcification, elongated shape, crossing retroperitoneal compartments | lymphangioma |
Cystic mass, calcification, no contrast enhancement, bone lesions, visceral involvement | Lymphangiomatosis |
Cyst, history of pancreatitis, high amylase level | Pancreatic pseudocyst |
Cyst in obese woman receiving hormonal therapy for menstrual irregularity | Mullerican cyst |
Unilocular cyst in subdiaphragmatic space | Bronchogenic cyst |
Multilocular cyst, thick septa, calcification, right lower quadrant | Pseudomyxoma retroperitoneal |
Presacral unilocular cyst | Epidermoid cyst |
Presacral multilocular cyst | Tailgut cyst |
Multilocular perianal cyst with history of anal fistual | Perianal mucinous carcinoma |
Surgical resection remains the mainstay of curative therapy. Neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy could be considered in patients with large tumors (>5 cm) or high-grade round cell or pleomorphic subtypes. Neoadjuvant or adjuvant radiation therapy may be used for local control in large high-grade liposarcoma.[2]
CONCLUSION
We have presented an uncommon case of a predominantly cystic retroperitoneal dedifferentiated liposarcoma. While liposarcoma is the most common primary retroperitoneal neoplasm, occurring in 33% of cases, they are most typically solid. Predominant cystic change is unusual in retroperitoneal liposarcoma; hence, why radiologists may not consider primary cystic retroperitoneal liposarcoma in the differential diagnosis of these retroperitoneal lesions. To date, only a few case reports of cystic retroperitoneal liposarcoma have been published in the literature. The diagnosis of primary retroperitoneal neoplasm and more specifically liposarcoma with a predominantly cystic component is only made possible following MRI characterization.
Declaration of patient consent
Patient’s consent not required as patient’s identity is not disclosed or compromised.
Conflicts of interest
There are no conflicts of interest.
Financial support and sponsorship
Nil.
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