Methods: A total of 17 inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor patients (5 males, 12 females; median age: 46 years) who were operated in our clinic between February 2000 and July 2019 were included. Data including sex, age, symptoms, accompanying diseases, tumor localization, tumor diameter, endobronchial extension, maximum standard uptake value of the tumors, surgery type, recurrence, and survival data were analyzed.
Results: Two patients were diagnosed preoperatively and two patients were diagnosed during surgery using frozen-section method before resection. Three (17.7%) patients underwent pneumonectomy, five (29.4%) patients lobectomy, three (17.7%) patients segmentectomy, five (29.4%) patients wedge resection, and one (5.8%) patient bronchial sleeve resection. All patients had complete resection with negative margins. None of them had lymph node metastasis. Median follow-up was 122 (range, 8 to 245 months) months. None of the patients received adjuvant therapy, there was no tumor recurrence or tumor-related death.
Conclusion: It is difficult to make a preoperative diagnosis of inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor patients. Systematic lymph node dissection is not required in diagnosed patients. Complete resection is the most important prognostic factor, and it is critical to achieve this with the smallest resection possible.
In the present study, we aimed to evaluate the clinicopathological features of pulmonary IMT cases operated in our clinic. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case series of Turkish IMT patients in the literature.
All pathology slides were reviewed to confirm the diagnosis. On microscopic examination, predominant cell component (plasma cell type, fibrohistiocytic type or mix), cellularity, border of lesion (ill-defined or infiltrative); presence of endobronchial component, necrosis, mitosis and pleomorphism were recorded. Using the immunohistochemically stained slides at the time of diagnosis, smooth muscle actin (SMA) (n=15), desmin (n=13), cytokeratin (CK) (n=13), CD34 (n=10), S100 (n=12) expression in spindle cells were evaluated. The Ki67 proliferation index was calculated (n=7). Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) expression was evaluated by immunohistochemistry in 15 patients with D5F3 (n=3) and ALK01 (n=12) clones. Only in one patient, ALK rearrangement was evaluated by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) (Figure 1).
The follow-up time was defined as the time between curative surgery and final control. As there was no recurrence and only one patient died from an irrelevant cause, no survival statistics were performed.
In one patient who underwent pneumonectomy due to left hilar IMT, Takayasu arteritis was diagnosed postoperatively. A 16-year-old female patient (No. 7) had right thoracotomy with incomplete resection in another clinic. The tumor progressed under infliximab and radiotherapy. Finally, six years later from the initial diagnosis, she was referred to our clinic and right carinal sleeve pneumonectomy was performed. Currently, she is alive with no sign of the disease for 10 years.
In microscopic examination, all tumors were composed of spindle cells and inflammatory cells in variable distribution. Spindle cells showed fascicular pattern in some of the tumors. Necrosis, mitosis, and pleomorphism were seen in 12.5%, 11.8% and 11.8% of the tumors, respectively. Predominant cell component was plasma cell in 23.5%, fibrohistiocytic in 41.2%, and mixed in 35.3% of the tumors. Cellularity was low in 23.5% and intermediate or high in 76.5% of the tumors. Two (11.7%, No. 6 and 16) patients had infiltrative tumors. Spindle cells were positive with SMA (64.3%), desmin (23.1%) and negative with CK, CD34 and S100. Ki67 index ranged from 1 to 10% with a median value of 5%. The ALK expression was noted in 28.6% of the tumors. The FISH was performed only in one ALK-positive tumor and this tumor had ALK rearrangement based on the FISH analysis.
In previous studies including 10 or more cases, 41.7% of the patients are females and the mean age is 40.2±11.4 years. In the present study, 70.5% of cases were females and the mean age was 43±18.3 years. Mean tumor diameter was 38.4±6 mm and 24.5% of tumors were centrally located in the previous literature, whereas mean tumor diameter was 35.4±18.5 mm and 17.6% of tumors were centrally located in this study. One of our patients (No. 6) had a tumor in the left main pulmonary artery. A total of 56% of the patients were symptomatic in the literature and, similarly, 52.9% of our patients were symptomatic. Recurrence was observed in five patients who underwent complete resection and the mean follow-up was 73.8±40 months in the publications (Table 2).[2-6,8-14] In the present study, the median follow up was 122 months and there was no recurrence.
Table 2. Case series of inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor including over 10 patients
An 81-year-old patient (No. 16) had walking difficulty, and the tumor had spinal canal extension in this patient. Mass excision was made with wedge resection to the lung and for spinal canal extension by laminectomy. This case is a good example of the extraparenchymal extension of IMT. Takayasu arteritis was detected in the Patient No. 6 after surgery. Although there is no proven relationship between the two conditions, we believe that this association may be supportive of the link between chronic inflammation and IMT development.
Furthermore, IMT is composed of myofibroblastic spindle cells, which are arranged in fascicular pattern, with eosinophilic cytoplasm and ovoid vesicular nuclei. Mitotic rate is variable, nuclear atypia is absent or minimal.[1] Spindle cells are associated with a plasma cell predominant chronic inflammatory infiltrate. Foamy histiocytes, multinucleated giant cells, or neutrophils can accompany to the infiltrate. Spindle cells can show positivity with vimentin, SMA, desmin, muscle-specific actin (MSA), and focal positivity with epithelial markers such as CK and epithelial membrane antigen (EMA). Half of IMTs have ALK gene rearrangement and spindle cells can show positivity with ALK antibody in immunohistochemical analysis. Histopathological subtypes varied significantly due to the different classifications used. The most commonly preferred classification of IMT is based on predominant cellular component as fibrohistiocytic type and plasma cell type; however, histopathological classification has no prognostic value.[15] In this study, predominant cell component was fibrohistiocytic in the majority of tumors (41.2%), and two (11.7%) patients had microscopically infiltrative type tumors, but all the patients had excellent outcomes independent of their histopathological types.
It is quite difficult to obtain a definite preoperative diagnosis in IMT.[12] Therefore, routine examinations performed before lung surgery should be requested. It would be appropriate to perform blood tests, pulmonary function tests, cranial CT, thoracic CT and PET/CT. Frozen section is important both to clarify the diagnosis and to determine the width of resection intraoperatively. In Peretti et al.'s[4] study, 35 patients underwent intraoperative frozen-section analysis and only five (14.2%) patients received IMT diagnosis. In our series, we had 10 frozen-section analysis cases and only two (20%) of them were reported as IMT. If there is a need for extended resection or pneumonectomy and the frozen section analysis is indeterminate, a second surgery after definitive diagnosis may be plausible. Of note, IMT may mimic inflammatory reactions and hematolymphoid proliferations. Microscopic features, immunohistochemical and molecular profile can help in the differential diagnosis. Spindle cell proliferation admixed with inflammatory cells and positivity of spindle cells with SMA, desmin, MSA showing myofibroblastic differentiation are diagnostic clues. The ALK expression or ALK gene rearrangement in the spindle cells support the diagnosis of IMT.[16]
No significant difference was observed in survival and recurrence in 17 patients who underwent major (pneumonectomy, lobectomy) or minor (segmentectomy, wedge resection) resections in the case series of Chen et al.[14] This result is also consistent with the results of our study. Wedge resection is sufficient in small and peripheral tumors; for larger and aggressive tumors, lobectomy, pneumonectomy or extended resections can be performed. Complete resection is the most important prognostic factor and incomplete resection may result in tumor recurrence as seen in one of our patients (No. 7). Although there are reports about spontaneously disappearing tumors or good respond to steroid therapy, main method of treatment is surgery.[13] Radiotherapy can be considered for incomplete resections or inoperable cases. Lymph node metastasis was not observed in our patients, similar to the aforementioned series. It is not necessary to make a systematic lymph node dissection for IMT patients, if a pre- or intraoperative diagnosis of IMT can be achieved.
There are two major limitations for this study. This is a retrospective case series study and as there is one exitus and no recurrence in the study population, survival analysis could not be done.
In conclusion, it is difficult to make a preoperative diagnosis of inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor. Systematic lymph node dissection is not required in diagnosed patients. Complete resection is the most important prognostic factor, and it is of critical importance to achieve this with the smallest resection possible. Further studies are warranted to confirm these findings.
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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