# Intramuscular Myxoma of the Penis: A Case Report

**Authors:** Paul E Ngwu, Ifeanyichukwu E Ihedoro, Chibueze P Ohiarah, Emeka S Ogbata, Enyinnanya V Onyemachi

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.101646 · 2026-01-15

## TL;DR

A rare case of a benign tumor called intramuscular myxoma was found on a man's penis, highlighting the importance of accurate diagnosis to avoid unnecessary treatment.

## Contribution

This paper reports a rare case of intramuscular myxoma in the penis, contributing to the limited literature on this unusual tumor location.

## Key findings

- Intramuscular myxoma can occur in the penis, a location rarely associated with this tumor.
- Accurate diagnosis through imaging and histopathology is crucial to distinguish it from malignant tumors.
- Complete surgical removal is effective and recurrence is uncommon.

## Abstract

Intramuscular myxoma (IMM) is a rare benign mesenchymal tumour, characterised by hypocellularity, sparse vascularity, and abundant myxoid stroma, most commonly arising in large skeletal muscles such as the thigh and shoulder girdle. It typically presents as a slow-growing, painless mass in middle-aged adults and is thought to originate from fibroblastic or mesenchymal cells, with GNAS mutations identified in many cases. Although benign, its clinical and radiological features may mimic low-grade myxoid sarcomas, creating diagnostic challenges. Penile involvement is exceptionally rare, with very few cases reported in the literature, and this unusual location often raises concern for malignant soft tissue tumours. Accurate diagnosis, therefore, relies on histopathological evaluation, supported by imaging, to avoid overtreatment. Complete surgical excision is curative, with recurrence being uncommon, and reporting such cases contributes to improved recognition and management of this rare penile tumour.

This case concerns a 27-year-old man with a slow-growing mass on the ventral aspect of the distal penile shaft, present for over 10 years, which posed a diagnostic dilemma. However, with the aid of imaging and histology, a confirmation of this rare pathology was made.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** GNAS (GNAS complex locus) [NCBI Gene 2778] {aka AHO, AIMAH1, C20orf45, GNAS1, GPSA, GSA}
- **Diseases:** malignant soft tissue tumours (MESH:D012983), benign mesenchymal tumour (MESH:D009369), penile tumour (MESH:D010412), myxoid sarcomas (MESH:D045888), IMM (MESH:D009232), Penis (MESH:D010409)

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12906638/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12906638