Mast cell sarcoma
Mast cell sarcoma | |
---|---|
Specialty | Oncology |
Usual onset | Can occur at any age.[1] |
Prognosis | The median survival time is less than 18 months |
Mast cell sarcoma is an extremely aggressive[2] form of sarcoma made up of neoplastic mast cells. A sarcoma is a tumor made of cells from connective tissue. Mast cell sarcoma is an extremely rare tumor. The largest analysis to date comprises 34 cases.[3] Prognosis is extremely poor. People with a mast cell sarcoma have no skin lesions, and pathology examination of the tumor shows it to be very malignant with an aggressive growth pattern.[4] Mast cell sarcoma should not be confused with extracutaneous mastocytoma, a rare benign mast cell tumor without destructive growth. In the cases observed, mast cell sarcoma terminated quickly as mast cell leukemia; one of the most aggressive human cancers.[5]
See also
References
- PMID 27602777.
- S2CID 46710032.
- PMID 35105959.
- ^ Nancy Gould, "Diagnosis and Classification of Mastocytosis Archived 2004-10-27 at the Wayback Machine", The Mastocytosis Society.
- ISBN 978-0-387-73743-0.[page needed]
External links