Two cases of solitary infantile myofibromatosis (IM) are presented. Solitary IM are tumors prone to spontaneous regression. Histopathologically, several tumor lobules in our IM cases had central areas of massive cell death, with nuclear pyknosis, cytoplasmic hyalinization and nuclear fragmentation but without lymphoid or neutrophilic cell infiltration. These central cell death areas consisted of about 40% in case 2 and 50% in case 1 of the entire tumor tissues, respectively. Electron microscopy revealed that the condensed nuclei and cytoplasm were fragmented into "apoptotic bodies", with or without phagocytosis by histiocytes. DNA fragmentation, as evidenced by the terminal deoxy transferase-mediated uptake of biotinylated dUTP, was identified at massive cell death areas on paraffin sections from both cases. A characteristic 180- to 190-bp nucleosomal ladder was detected in DNA obtained from the tumor cells in case 1. The collective evidence suggested that these tumors underwent a central, massive apoptosis. As massive cell death similar to that seen in the present cases has been described in other documented cases of IM, we propose that the spontaneous regression that frequently occurs with this type of tumor may be mediated by massive apoptotic cell death.