São Paulo Medical Journal ()

Cellular angiofibroma of the vulva: case report with clinicopathological and immunohistochemistry study

  • Adilha Misson Rua Micheletti,
  • Ana Cristina Araújo Lemos da Silva,
  • Antonio Geraldo Nascimento,
  • Cléber Sérgio da Silva,
  • Eddie Fernando Candido Murta,
  • Sheila Jorge Adad

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S1516-31802005000500010
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 123, no. 5
pp. 250 – 252

Abstract

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CONTEXT: Cellular angiofibroma of the vulva is a rare tumor that was first described in 1997. It occurs in middle-aged women (average age: 47 years), has small size (< 3 cm) and well-circumscribed margins. CASE REPORT: We describe a case in a 51-year-old woman whose preoperative diagnosis was confounded with Bartholin's glandular cyst. The neoplasia was well delimited and made up of three characteristic components: fusiform cells forming small fascicles, numerous blood vessels and adipose tissue interspersed between the fusiform cells. The stroma cells were positive for vimentin and negative for CD34, protein S-100, actin and desmin. The differential diagnoses for this tumor include aggressive angiomyxoma, angiomyofibroblastoma, lipoma of fusiform cells, solitary fibrous tumor, perineurioma and leiomyoma.

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