A woman in her 70s presented with a small subcutaneous retrosacrococcygeal mass and a history of elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate present for several years. It was misdiagnosed as an inflammatory… Click to show full abstract
A woman in her 70s presented with a small subcutaneous retrosacrococcygeal mass and a history of elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate present for several years. It was misdiagnosed as an inflammatory process of unclear origin. She underwent further investigation with the appearance of weight loss and weakness. A sacrococcygeal mass was noted on CT scan. A core needle biopsy was inconclusive for chordoma versus myoepithelioma. Wide surgical resection of the tumour including the coccygeal bone was performed. Following surgery, all the systemic symptoms resolved with normalisation of inflammatory markers. The pathological examination showed a relatively circumscribed multinodular myxoid tumour with lymphatic tissue cuff. Pan-sarcoma fusion analysis detected an EWSR1 (Exon7)-CREB1 (Exon7) fusion gene. The lesion was diagnosed as angiomatoid fibrous histiocytoma with paraneoplastic syndrome presentation of several years’ duration.
               
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