Fat-Containing Soft Tissue Tumors in Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults: Which Require Biopsy?

Cancers (Basel). 2023 Jun 17;15(12):3228. doi: 10.3390/cancers15123228.

Abstract

Purpose: To confirm the overall benignity of fat-containing soft tissue tumors (STT) on a pediatric cohort and to define the clinical and imaging features that warrant a biopsy.

Methods: A retrospective monocentric study was conducted on patients aged less than 25 years consecutively referred for fat-containing STT to our Comprehensive Cancer Center between 1998 and 2022. Tumor imaging characteristics at diagnosis (US, CT, or MRI) were correlated with pathology.

Results: The database extraction identified 63 fat-containing tumors with clinical, histologic, and imaging data available for review. In total, 58 (92%) were benign tumors: 36 lipoblastomas and lipomas, 12 fibrous hamartomas of infancy (FHI), 5 lipofibromatosis, 2 lipomas arborescens, 2 lipomatosis and 1 spindle-cell lipoma. Five patients (8%) were diagnosed with liposarcoma. Factors significantly correlated with malignancy were age >10 years old (p < 0.001), having a cancer-predisposing condition (p < 0.001), a percentage of fat <25% (p = 0.002), and a presence of myxoid zones (p < 0.001) on imaging.

Conclusion: Most fat-containing STT in children may be classified as benign tumors based on clinics and imaging. The indication for biopsy could be limited to patients aged 10 years or more with either a cancer-predisposing condition or imaging features demonstrating either a low-fat component (<25%) or the presence of myxoid zones.

Keywords: adipose tissue; biopsy; liposarcoma; pediatrics; soft tissue neoplasms.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.