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  Vol. 125 No. 3, March 2007 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Solitary Fibrous Tumor of the Conjunctiva

Jacob Pe'er, MD; Alexander Maly, MD; Yael Deckel, MD; Shahar Frenkel, MD, PhD

Arch Ophthalmol. 2007;125(3):423-426.

Solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) is a relatively rare tumor that was originally described in the pleura. In recent years, SFTs have been described in many extrapleural sites such as the lung, mediastinum, pericardium, peritoneum, upper respiratory tract, liver, thyroid, nasal and paranasal sinuses, parotid and salivary glands, and spine and other soft tissue.1-2 In 1994, 2 independent articles described the first cases of SFT in the orbit.3-4 Since then, more than 50 orbital SFTs have been described in the medical literature.5 These include SFTs of the lacrimal gland6 and the lacrimal sac.7 Our case is the first reported case, to our knowledge, of SFT of the conjunctiva.

Report of a Case

A 29-year-old woman, a nurse by profession, complained of a lesion in the lower fornix of the right eye that existed for at least a year and that occasionally disturbed her. On examination, her visual acuity was 1.0 (6/6) in each eye. The intraocular pressure was 14 mm Hg in each eye. In the right eye, an elevated, firm, elliptical, mobile, pink mass, about 1 cm in diameter, was found in the lower fornix of the conjunctiva, close to the caruncle (Figure 1). The anterior segments and the fundi in both eyes were normal.


Figure 1
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Figure 1. Clinical picture of the right eye showing an elliptical, pink tumor in the lower conjunctival fornix, close to the caruncle.


The lesion in the right eye was completely excised under local anesthesia and sent to the ophthalmic pathology laboratory. Macroscopic examination revealed a solid, gray piece of tissue measuring 10 x 10 x 6 mm. Microscopic examination revealed a well-circumscribed mass, partially covered by conjunctival tissue (Figure 2). The mass was composed mostly of spindle cells (Figure 3) that were arranged somewhat differently in various areas but mostly arranged randomly in a "patternless pattern." In areas, the cells were arranged in a fascicular pattern. In many sites, tumor cells were seen between thick collagen fibers. In areas, confluent collagen fibers displayed "hyalinization" (Figure 4). No multinucleated giant cells, mitotic activity, pleomorphism, or atypia were identified. Tumor cells were stained positively with CD34, O13 (CD99), BCL2, and vimentin (Figures 5, 6, 7, 8) and negatively with S100 and {alpha}-actin. According to these findings, we made the diagnosis of SFT of the conjunctiva.


Figure 2
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Figure 2. Histological whole-mount section shows a well-circumscribed, dense mass covered on 1 side by the conjunctiva and surrounded by loose connective tissue (hematoxylin-eosin, original magnification x1.25).



Figure 3
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Figure 3. Histological picture shows that the tumor is composed of spindle cells and collagen fibers and covered on 1 side by conjunctival epithelium (hematoxylin-eosin, original magnification x10).



Figure 4
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Figure 4. Higher magnification of the histological section shows spindle cells arranged randomly in a "patternless pattern" with collagen fibers between them. Confluent collagen fibers display "hyalinization" (hematoxylin-eosin, original magnification x40).



Figure 5
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Figure 5. Immunostaining for CD34 shows positive cytoplasmic staining (original magnification x40).



Figure 6
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Figure 6. Immunostaining for CD99 (O13) shows strong positive cytoplasmic staining (original magnification x10).



Figure 7
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Figure 7. Immunostaining for BCL2 shows positive nuclear staining (original magnification x10).



Figure 8
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Figure 8. Immunostaining for vimentin shows positive cytoplasmic staining (original magnification x10).



Comment

Fibrous tumors of any type are rare in the conjunctiva. Conjunctival tumors such as fibroma, fibrous histiocytoma, nodular fasciitis, giant cell angiofibroma, and elastofibroma oculi have been described in the literature. Solitary fibrous tumor in the ocular region has been reported in the orbit,1-6 lacrimal gland,6 and lacrimal sac7 but, to our knowledge, never has been described in the conjunctiva.

Solitary fibrous tumors belong to the category of fibroblastic tumors. On cut section, regardless of the site of origin, the lesions are usually well-circumscribed, nodular, firm, gray-white masses, occasionally with myxoid areas, hemorrhage, and necrosis.8 Regardless of location, the extrapleural tumors are histologically identical to those in the pleura, which are principally composed of spindle cells dispersed among elongated, thin, parallel collagen bands. The arrangement of the cells may vary from area to area in the same tumor. In some zones, they are arranged in short, ill-defined fascicles, whereas in others, they are arranged randomly in what has been described as a patternless pattern. The nuclei are small, and the tumor has little or no mitotic activity and only mild to moderate nuclear atypia. A characteristic feature of the lesion that usually suggests the diagnosis is the relatively striking areas of hyalinization. Artifactual "cracks" may develop between the cells and collagen or between groups of collagen fibers. Myxoid changes may be seen.

The vascular pattern varies from narrow vascular clefts to gaping, branching vascular channels. Areas of the tumor may show fibrous histiocytomalike storiform pattern, hemangiopericytomalike staghorn and synovial sarcomatous, and neural-like palisading regional architecture.9 This multiplicity of histologic patterns and an absence of single intralesional architecture characterize SFT.

The light microscopic differential diagnosis of SFT includes giant cell angiofibroma, hemangiopericytoma, fibrous histiocytoma, peripheral nerve sheath tumor, fibromyxoid sarcoma, monophasic synovial sarcoma, and other rare mesenchymal tumors. Immunohistochemical stains are helpful in the differential diagnosis and are supportive of the light microscopic findings. Solitary fibrous tumors are typically positive for CD34, BCL2, CD99, and vimentin and negative for desmin, epithelial markers like cytokeratin, vascular markers like factor VIII–related antigen, neural markers like S100 protein, and muscle-specific actin and smooth-muscle actin.1 Giant cell angiofibroma may share similar immunostainings, but multinucleated giant cells are not usually seen in SFT. In any case, positive immunomarkers lack sufficient specificity, and the typical light microscopic appearance is important in making the correct diagnosis of SFT.

Solitary fibrous tumors are usually benign, but malignant SFTs have been described. These malignant tumors show more cellularity, more than 4 mitoses per high-power field, cellular pleomorphism, or giant cells. Incomplete resection of benign SFT results in a higher recurrence rate and carries potential for malignant transformation. Malignant SFT may metastasize and cause death. To our knowledge, there was only 1 reported case of malignant SFT of the orbit.1

Solitary fibrous tumors are believed to be more common in the orbit than previously suspected, and it should be included in the differential diagnosis of benign orbital tumors. However, SFT of the conjunctiva has never been described previously in the literature, to our knowledge, and the only related conjunctival tumor that has been reported is giant cell angiofibroma.10 From now on, SFT should be included in the differential diagnosis of stromal tumors of the conjunctiva.


AUTHOR INFORMATION

Correspondence: Dr Pe'er, Department of Ophthalmology, Hadassah University Hospital, PO Box 12000, 91120 Jerusalem, Israel (peer{at}md.huji.ac.il).

Financial Disclosure: None reported.


REFERENCES

1. Krishnakumar S, Subramanion N, Mohan ER, Mahesh L, Biswas J, Rao NA. Solitary fibrous tumor of the orbit: a clinicopathologic study of six cases with review of the literature. Surv Ophthalmol. 2003;48:544-554. FULL TEXT | ISI | PUBMED
2. Bernardini FP, de Conciliis C, Schneider S, Kersten RC, Kulwin DR. Solitary fibrous tumor of the orbit: is it rare? report of a case series and review of the literature. Ophthalmology. 2003;110:1442-1448. FULL TEXT | ISI | PUBMED
3. Dorfman DM, To K, Dickersin GR, Rosenberg AE, Pilch BZ. Solitary fibrous tumor of the orbit. Am J Surg Pathol. 1994;18:281-287. ISI | PUBMED
4. Westra WH, Gerald W, Rosai J. Solitary fibrous tumor: consistent CD34 immunoreactivity and occurrence in the orbit. Am J Surg Pathol. 1994;18:992-998. ISI | PUBMED
5. Romer M, Bode B, Schuknecht B, Schmid S, Holzmann D. Solitary fibrous tumor of the orbit—two cases and a review of the literature. Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol. 2005;262:81-88. FULL TEXT | PUBMED
6. Kim HY, Lee SY, Kang SJ, Kim HJ. Solitary fibrous tumor of the orbit: a poorly-recognized orbital lesion. Acta Ophthalmol Scand. 1999;77:704-708. FULL TEXT | ISI | PUBMED
7. Rumelt S, Kassif Y, Cohen I, Rehany U. A rare solitary fibrous tumour of the lacrimal sac presenting as acquired nasolacrimal duct obstruction. Eye. 2003;17:429-431. FULL TEXT | ISI | PUBMED
8. Weiss SW, Goldblum JR. Soliltary fibrous tumors. In: Enzinger and Weiss' Soft Tissue Tumors. 4th ed. Philadelphia, Pa: Mosby; 2001:1021-1035.
9. Ali SZ, Hoon V, Hada S, Heelan R, Zakowski MF. Solitary fibrous tumor: a cytologic-histologic study with clinical, radiologic, and immunohistochemical correlations. Cancer. 1997;81:116-121. FULL TEXT | ISI | PUBMED
10. Hayashi N, Borodic G, Karesh JW; et al. Giant cell angiofibroma of the orbit and eyelid. Ophthalmology. 1999;106:1223-1229. FULL TEXT | ISI | PUBMED

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