Journal of Toxicologic Pathology
Online ISSN : 1881-915X
Print ISSN : 0914-9198
ISSN-L : 0914-9198
Case Reports
Spontaneous carcinosarcoma originating from the renal pelvis ina rat
Akira InomataKazuhiro HayakawaToyohiko AokiSatoru Hosokawa
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2016 Volume 29 Issue 3 Pages 185-189

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Abstract

Carcinosarcoma is a rare neoplasm composed of malignant epithelial and stromal elements, and, for rats, carcinosarcomas in the kidney have not been reported. In a long-term study to gather background data, we encountered a spontaneous carcinosarcoma originating from the renal pelvis with metastasis to the lung. At necropsy, a mass was observed in the abdominal cavity, and white nodules were scattered in lung lobes. Microscopically, there was polypoid hyperplasia of the urothelium accompanied by hyperplasia of spindle stromal cells in the pelvis. The intra-abdominal tumor was composed of epithelial and stromal elements; in the lung, the tumor cells invaded along alveoli/bronchi and occasionally invaded the parenchyma from the blood vessels. Immunohistochemical and electron microscopic examinations revealed that the epithelial element consisted of transitional epithelial cells and that the stromal element consisted of lipoblasts. The tumor was diagnosed as a carcinosarcoma originating from the renal pelvis, and this is the first report of a carcinosarcoma originating from the renal pelvis in a rat.

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© 2016 The Japanese Society of Toxicologic Pathology
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