# Intra-Abdominal and Retroperitoneal Benign Lipomatous Tumors—An Extremely Rare Mimic of Liposarcoma and its Diagnostic Challenge

**Authors:** Faizan Malik, Andrew W. Allbee, Paul J. Zhang

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/10668969231167511 · International Journal of Surgical Pathology · 2023-05-02

## TL;DR

This study examines rare benign lipomatous tumors in the abdomen that can look like liposarcoma, emphasizing the need for molecular tests to confirm diagnosis.

## Contribution

The paper presents a rare cohort of benign lipomatous tumors and highlights the diagnostic value of FISH testing to differentiate them from liposarcoma.

## Key findings

- Nine retroperitoneal/intra-abdominal benign lipomatous tumors were identified, mostly incidentally.
- FISH testing for MDM2 and CDK4 amplification was negative in all cases, confirming benignity.
- Conservative excision without removing abutted organs was sufficient in most cases with no recurrence observed.

## Abstract

Background. Lipomas are common superficial soft tissue tumors of mature adipocytes. In contrast, well-differentiated/dedifferentiated liposarcoma typically presents in the retroperitoneum as large masses. We provide clinicopathologic and follow-up details of 9 retroperitoneal/intra-abdominal benign lipomatous tumors (BLT) and discuss the utility of ancillary fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) in distinguishing from their malignant counterparts. Design. Clinicopathologic details and histology of 9 intra-abdominal and retroperitoneal lipomas were studied along with ancillary CD10 immunohistochemistry (IHC) and FISH for MDM2 and CDK4 amplification. Results. There were 6 females and 3 males. Median age at diagnosis was 52 years (range 36-81 years). Seven were identified incidentally and 2 presented with primary complaints. On imaging, 7 were considered suspicious for liposarcoma. Grossly, the tumors ranged from 3.4 to 41.2 cm (median 16.5 cm). Histologically, all cases showed well-differentiated BLT, further classified as lipoma (n = 7; 1 with metaplastic ossification, 2 with prominent vessels, and 4 ordinary lipomas) and lipoma-like hibernoma (n = 2)—the latter 2 showed intramuscular lesions with interspersed brown fat. CD10 IHC showed strong staining in the 2 hibernomas, whereas the staining was weak in the remaining. MDM2 and CDK4 amplification were negative by FISH in all. Follow-up (median 18 months) did not show recurrence on clinical or imaging evaluation. Conclusion. Retroperitoneal/intra-abdominal BLT are extremely rare and are indistinguishable clinically and radiographically from liposarcoma. This necessitates molecular confirmation even when the histology is convincingly benign, for a confident diagnosis. Our cohort shows that conservative excision without removal of abutted organs is sufficient in most cases.

## Linked entities

- **Proteins:** MDM2 (MDM2 proto-oncogene), CDK4 (cyclin dependent kinase 4), MME (membrane metalloendopeptidase)
- **Diseases:** liposarcoma (MONDO:0003585), lipoma (MONDO:0005106), hibernoma (MONDO:0021168)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** CDK4 (cyclin dependent kinase 4) [NCBI Gene 1019] {aka CMM3, MCPH31, PSK-J3}, MME (membrane metalloendopeptidase) [NCBI Gene 4311] {aka CALLA, CD10, CMT2T, NEP, SCA43, SFE}, MDM2 (MDM2 proto-oncogene) [NCBI Gene 4193] {aka ACTFS, HDMX, LSKB, hdm2}
- **Diseases:** tumors (MESH:D009369), Lipomas (MESH:D008067), BLT (MESH:D008080), soft tissue tumors (MESH:D012983), intra-abdominal and retroperitoneal lipomas (MESH:C535553)

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10901880/full.md

## References

53 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10901880/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10901880