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      Paratesticular fibrous pseudotumor in young males presenting with histological features of IgG4-related disease: two case reports

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          Abstract

          Introduction

          Paratesticular fibrous pseudotumors represent benign new growths confined to intrascrotal structures. Both pathogenesis and clinical management are little understood due to the rarity of the lesion, with less than 200 cases reported to date. Recently, paratesticular fibrous pseudotumors have been postulated to be immunoglobulin G4-related, pathogenetically. Here we report two cases of patients with paratesticular fibrous pseudotumor to highlight the clinical features of this rare disease and we report the immunohistochemical examinations to support the theory of paratesticular fibrous pseudotumor being an immunoglobulin G4-related disease.

          Case presentations

          A 28-year-old white man presented with a painless intrascrotal mass. After a clinical examination, a malignant growth was suspected. His ultrasound results revealed a well-demarcated hypoechoic lesion of 1.5cm in diameter at the spermatic cord. Our patient underwent local excision. His follow-up has been uneventful for 12 years. The second case was an 18-year-old white man who presented with a painless scrotal mass suspicious of testicular tumor. A magnetic resonance imaging scan revealed a 3cm mass at the spermatic cord with very low signal density on T2-weighted imaging and a low and inhomogeneous uptake of gadolinium contrast agent on T1-weighted, fat-suppressed imaging. Following local excision, our patient has been well for 18 months.

          On histological examination, both of the lesions consisted of collagen-rich hyalinized fibrotic tissue with storiform features. There were lymphofollicular infiltrates and, sporadically, also venulitis. The immunoglobulin G4 staining (in case 2) showed an infiltrate of 10 to 15 positive cells per high-power field on average, corresponding to a proportion of 40% in evaluable hot spots. The two patients with paratesticular fibrous pseudotumor presented within a time span of 15 years. During that time, 400 patients with testicular germ cell tumors had been treated in our institution.

          Conclusions

          The specific histological features documented in our case lend support to the theory of paratesticular fibrous pseudotumor being an immunoglobulin G4-related sclerosing disorder. Paratesticular fibrous pseudotumors usually occur in young adulthood. Clinically, paratesticular fibrous pseudotumor can mimic testicular malignancy. Ultrasonographic findings are largely unspecific, however, scrotal magnetic resonance imaging may aid in discriminating the lesion from malignant tumors. Local excision, whenever technically feasible, is the preferred treatment of paratesticular fibrous pseudotumor.

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          Most cited references13

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          IgG4-related sclerosing disease: a critical appraisal of an evolving clinicopathologic entity.

          An elevated serum titer of immunoglobulin G4 (IgG4), the least common (3% to 6%) of the 4 subclasses of IgG, is a surrogate marker for the recently characterized IgG4-related sclerosing disease. The syndrome affects predominantly middle-aged and elderly patients, with male predominance. The patients present with symptoms referable to the involvement of 1 or more sites, usually in the form of mass lesions. The prototype is IgG4-related sclerosing pancreatitis (also known as autoimmune pancreatitis), most commonly presenting as painless obstructive jaundice with or without a pancreatic mass. Other common sites of involvement are the hepatobiliary tract, salivary gland, orbit, and lymph node, but practically any organ-site can be affected, such as retroperitoneum, aorta, mediastinum, soft tissue, skin, central nervous system, breast, kidney, prostate, upper aerodigestive tract, and lung. The patients usually have a good general condition, with no fever or constitutional symptoms. Common laboratory findings include raised serum globulin, IgG, IgG4, and IgE, whereas lactate dehydrogenase is usually not raised. Some patients have low titers of autoantibodies (such as antinuclear antibodies and rheumatoid factor). The disease often shows excellent response to steroid therapy. The natural history is characterized by the development of multiple sites of involvement with time, sometimes after many years. However, the disease can remain localized to 1 site in occasional patients. The main pathologic findings in various extranodal sites include lymphoplasmacytic infiltration, lymphoid follicle formation, sclerosis and obliterative phlebitis, accompanied by atrophy and loss of the specialized structures of the involved tissue (such as secretory acini in pancreas, salivary gland, or lacrimal gland). The relative predominance of the lymphoplasmacytic and sclerotic components results in 3 histologic patterns: pseudolymphomatous, mixed, and sclerosing. Immunostaining shows increased IgG4+ cells in the involved tissues (>50 per high-power field, with IgG4/IgG ratio >40%). The lymph nodes show multicentric Castleman disease-like features, reactive follicular hyperplasia, interfollicular expansion, or progressive transformation of germinal centers, with the unifying feature being an increase in IgG4+ plasma cells on immunostaining. The nature and pathogenesis of IgG4-related sclerosing disease are still elusive. Occasionally, the disease can be complicated by the development of malignant lymphoma and possibly carcinoma.
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            Benign fibromatous tumors of the testis and paratesticular region: a report of 9 cases with a proposed classification of fibromatous tumors and tumor-like lesions.

            Benign intrascrotal fibrous proliferations are uncommon, with most arising from the paratesticular region and falling into the category of so-called fibrous pseudotumor. We describe two neoplastic forms of benign fibrous tumor of the testis and its adnexa: fibroma of gonadal stromal origin and fibroma of the testicular tunics. Three patients with gonadal stromal fibroma were 28, 33, and 35 years of age and presented with painless masses. The tumors were circumscribed, intratesticular, yellow-white or white lesions 0.9 to 4.0 cm in diameter and had microscopic features identical to those of the ovarian fibroma. Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells were strongly positive for vimentin (3/3 cases), focally positive for actin and desmin (2/3 cases) and negative for S-100, keratin, and CD34 (3/3 cases). Six fibromas of the testicular tunics arose in patients 22, 34, 60, 68, 70, and 74 years old and were also asymptomatic masses. Four of them were circumscribed, whorled, white masses arising from the tunica albuginea with variable areas of myxoid change; one was pedunculated and grew exclusively into the cavity of the tunica vaginalis, whereas the other three at least partially extended into the testis as well. The other two tumors were unattached to the tunica albuginea and presented as circumscribed, white-tan paratesticular masses, partially covered by tunica vaginalis. Microscopically, the tumors were slightly to moderately cellular, with bland spindle or stellate cells lying in a myxoid or collagenous stroma with prominent vessels. The two paratesticular tumors had features typical of solitary fibrous tumor. Immunohistochemically, the fibromas of the testicular tunics were negative for S-100, keratin, and desmin. Focal, weak reactivity for actin was present in one case. CD34 was positive in three cases; in the two tumors resembling solitary fibrous tumors it was strong, and in the other it was focal and was limited to the region just below the tunica vaginalis. Eight tumors were treated by radical orchiectomy and one by excision of the mass alone. The outcome was benign in the seven cases in which followup information is available.
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              Paratesticular fibrous pseudotumor--an IgG4-related disorder?

              Paratesticular fibrous pseudotumor (nodular periorchitis, inflammatory pseudotumor of the spermatic cord) is a rare, benign condition of unknown etiology characterized by solitary or multiple intrascrotal nodules composed of dense fibrous tissue with a variable, sometimes sparse inflammatory infiltrate. Based on certain similarities to other fibroinflammatory disorders characterized by infiltrates of IgG4-expressing plasma cells and recently subsumed under the heading of IgG4-mediated diseases, we investigated the plasma cell distribution and immunoglobulin isotypes in three cases of paratesticular fibrous and inflammatory pseudotumor. All three cases showed a high number of IgG4-positive plasma cells with an IgG4 to IgG ratio of 44-48%. This finding indicates that paratesticular fibrous pseudotumor might belong to the growing list of IgG4-related diseases, which by now includes such diverse entities as retroperitoneal fibrosis, sclerosing pancreatitis and cholangitis, Riedel's thyroiditis, or sclerosing sialadenitis.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                J Med Case Rep
                J Med Case Rep
                Journal of Medical Case Reports
                BioMed Central
                1752-1947
                2013
                11 September 2013
                : 7
                : 225
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Klinik für Urologie, Albertinen-Krankenhaus Hamburg, Suentelstrasse 11a, 22457 Hamburg, Germany
                [2 ]Abteilung für Radiologie, Albertinen-Krankenhaus Hamburg, Suentelstrasse 11a, 22457 Hamburg, Germany
                [3 ]Institut für Pathologie, Albertinen-Krankenhaus Hamburg, Fangdieckstrasse 75a, 22547 Hamburg, Germany
                Article
                1752-1947-7-225
                10.1186/1752-1947-7-225
                3848042
                24025610
                80cb8bf2-ed41-4d59-922f-9a1cacc50314
                Copyright © 2013 Dieckmann et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 11 November 2012
                : 11 July 2013
                Categories
                Case Report

                Medicine
                paratesticular pseudotumor,igg4-related disease,scrotal magnetic resonance imaging,scrotal ultrasound,testis-sparing surgery

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