Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/44129
Title: Malignant cutaneous peripheral nerve sheath tumour with Rhabdomyosarcomatous Differentiation (Triton Tumour) in a domestic cat
Authors: Stoll, A. L.
Suárez-Bonnet, A. 
Summers, B. A.
Priestnall, S. L.
UNESCO Clasification: 3109 Ciencias veterinarias
Keywords: Cat
Peripheral nerve sheath tumour
Rhabdomyosarcomatous differentiation
Triton tumour
Issue Date: 2018
Journal: Journal of Comparative Pathology 
Abstract: Divergent differentiation is encountered frequently within human malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumours (MPNSTs). The new component is often a rhabdomyosarcoma, but in animals this specific form of divergent differentiation within MPNSTs has only been reported once (in a dog). Incisional wedge biopsy of a locally extensive, ventral abdominal wall mass, which extended from the dermis to the subcutis, from a 12-year-old female domestic shorthaired cat, was performed. The tissue was examined with routine haematoxylin and eosin staining and immunohistochemical methods. A malignant neoplasm with spindle and polygonal cell components and progression towards a rhabdomyosarcomatous phenotype was observed. Both neoplastic cell populations exhibited strong expression of vimentin and there was multifocal expression of S100 and desmin. There was strong cytoplasmic labelling for α-sarcomeric actin and muscle actin and weak labelling for myoglobin within the cells positive for desmin. There was multifocal positive nuclear labelling for myogenin. Glial fibrillary acidic protein, α-smooth muscle actin, microphthalmia-associated transcription factor and melanoma antigen recognized by T cells were not expressed. Microscopical features, aided by immunohistochemistry, identified a MPNST with progression towards a rhabdomyosarcomatous phenotype, a so-called ‘triton tumour’. A Schwann cell component could account for the divergent patterns of growth, given the plasticity of the neural crest. Nerve sheath tumours have been reported in the skin and subcutis of cats and are a differential diagnosis of feline cutaneous spindle cell neoplasms.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/44129
ISSN: 0021-9975
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcpa.2018.09.003
Source: Journal of Comparative Pathology [ISSN 0021-9975], v. 165, p. 1-5
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