Cellular Schwannoma
Image Description
Cellular schwannoma is a variant that is highly cellular and shows increased mitotic activity. They are usually solitary and well-circumscribed but may be multinodular or plexiform. They are more commonly found in deep-seated locations such as the posterior mediastinum or retroperitoneum. The tumors predominantly show Antoni A areas composed of dense interlacing fascicles of spindled Schwann cells (as shown here). The hypocellular Antoni B foci are either completely absent or small when present (< 10% of the tumor). Mitotic activity is generally < 4 mitoses/10 HPF. Focal necrosis is present in about 10% of cases.
The differential diagnosis of cellular schwannoma includes fibrosarcoma and leiomyosarcoma. Features favoring cellular schwannoma include: circumscribed tumor (capsule may or may not be present), high cellularity but disproportionately low mitotic activity, perivascular hyalinization, hypocellular Antoni B areas (when present), and diffuse strong immunoreactivity for S-100 protein.
The biologic behavior of cellular schwannomas is benign. Recurrences are rare when completely excised and metastases have not been reported.
The differential diagnosis of cellular schwannoma includes fibrosarcoma and leiomyosarcoma. Features favoring cellular schwannoma include: circumscribed tumor (capsule may or may not be present), high cellularity but disproportionately low mitotic activity, perivascular hyalinization, hypocellular Antoni B areas (when present), and diffuse strong immunoreactivity for S-100 protein.
The biologic behavior of cellular schwannomas is benign. Recurrences are rare when completely excised and metastases have not been reported.