Hibernomas can emerge in several areas including the head, neck, body, and extremities where there is an abundance of fetal brown adipose tissue.[3] However, mediastinal hibernomas are very rare. In this article, we present such a case due to its extreme rarity.
Figure 1: Image of mass surrounding vascular structures in mediastinum.
Microscopically, mature adipose tissue cells with an abundance of polygonal brown adipose tissue cells and a background of stromal cells and dense vascular structures were observed. The brown adipose tissue cells had multivacuolar, granular cytoplasms and small central nuclei (Figure 3). There was no mitotic activity or cytologic atypia. Immunohistochemical staining of tumor cells was positive for S100; however, there was no staining for cluster of differentiation 34 (CD34), CD1a, or CD68 (Figure 4). Based on these results, the case was interpreted as a mediastinal hibernoma.
Figure 4: Immunohistochemical staining of tumor cells was positive for S100.
Hibernomas have no pathognomonic findings in radiological examinations; therefore, they are extremely difficult to diagnose preoperatively. In CT, hibernomas are well-demarcated heterogeneous lesions with a density similar to adipose tissue and containing soft-tissue-density components. In magnetic resonance imaging, they are seen as lesions with high signal intensity in T1 a nd T 2-weighted images with slight loss of signal in fat-suppression sequences.[4] In PET-CT, hibernomas are very difficult to distinguish from liposarcomas because of their high level of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose retention.[6] The rich mitochondrial activity in brown adipose tissue is the probable cause of the high retention of 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose in PET-CT. Unlike lipomas, hibernomas are intensely vascularized tumors, which is why percutaneous core biopsy is not recommended in cases with suspected hibernoma, though, no complications are reportedly seen following one.[7] Likewise, in our case, there were no complications following the diagnostic percutaneous core needle biopsy. However, since biopsy results were noncontributory, definite diagnosis was possible only after the histopathological examination of the operative specimen.
Four histological variants have been defined: typical, myxoid, lipoma-like, and spindle-cell. Typical hibernoma consists of eosinophilic, pale, or mixed type of cells. Myxoid variant contains a loose basophilic matrix. Lipoma-like variant consists of only mixed cells. Spindle-cell hibernoma is similar to spindle-cell lipoma and consists of cells with single elongated nuclei, narrow bipolar cytoplasms, and prominent nucleoli. All variants have benign features.[8] Histopathological variant of a hibernoma does not affect the surgical procedure.
Complete surgical resection is the curative treatment for these tumors. To minimize the risk of postoperative bleeding or hematoma due to intense vascularity, one should pay heed to intraoperative bleeding. Local recurrence is non-existent in cases in which total excision has been carried out. Local recurrence is possible in cases in which total resection was not carried out and the remaining tumor tissue grows in size, though, local recurrence, metastasis, or malign transformation was not defined in the literature.[9] In compliance with the literature, there has been no recurrence in our case after nine months of follow-up.
Hibernoma is a rare benign tumor imitating a soft tissue lesion of malignant character like liposarcoma. Histopathological examination of a biopsy is required to rule out the diagnosis of liposarcoma. Surgically, total excision is the gold-standard treatment. To this day, there are no reports of any recurrence or malignant transformation.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to
the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the research
and/or authorship of this article.
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