J Korean Assoc Pediatr Surg.  2007 Dec;13(2):179-186.

The Clinical Manifestations of Lipoblastoma in Children

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Pediatric Surgery , University of Ulsan College of Medicine , Asan Medical Center, Seoul, Korea. ikkim@amc.seoul.kr

Abstract

Lipoblastoma is a rare benign soft tissue tumor occurring in infancy and early childhood. It is characterized by fat lobules with varying degrees of maturity, multivaculoated lipoblasts, fibrocapillary networks and myxoid stroma. Lipoblastoma has a good prognosis with no metastases despite its potential for local invasion. From Jan, 1990 through April, 2007, 12 children underwent the operation for lipoblastoma, 7 boys and 5 girls, diagnosed at median 22 months (5~43 months). Median follow up was 6 year 7 months. Primary sites included back (n=5), intraabdominal (n=2) and one in each of buttock, chest wall, neck, nose and scalp. Tumors presented with a growing mass in 9 patients, abdominal distension in 2, and an incidental finding on chest radiography in one. Complete excisions were done in all patients. There was one recurrence in a patient with a scalp mass. After reoperation, he has been doing well without evidence of recurrence. Lipoblastoma has a favorable prognosis, but recurrence can occur even with complete excision. Regular follow up is necessary to detect recurrences.

Keyword

Lipoblastoma; Children

MeSH Terms

Buttocks
Child*
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Incidental Findings
Lipoblastoma*
Neck
Neoplasm Metastasis
Nose
Prognosis
Radiography
Recurrence
Reoperation
Scalp
Thoracic Wall
Thorax
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