Background: Mixed tumours are composed of an admixture of an epithelial/myoepithelial and usually a myxochondroid stromal component. Adipocytes are found more rarely, and account for a minor part of the tumour. To date, only three cases of mixed tumour/pleomorphic adenoma of the salivary gland have been described, showing an extensive adipocyte content of more than 90% of the tumour tissue. Owing to this peculiarity, some authors have defined it as 'lipomatous pleomorphic adenoma'. We are not aware of previously reported similar lesions in the skin.
Objectives: We report a case of a tumour that occurred as a 2 x 2 x 1.5 cm nodule in the scalp of a 65-year-old man. Analogies with salivary lipomatous pleomorphic adenoma, as well as histogenesis and differential diagnoses are discussed here.
Methods: A histological, immunohistochemical and ultrastructural study was performed.
Results: The tumour was well-circumscribed and showed a substantial mature adipose tissue component intermingled with epithelial cells arranged in ducts and branching tubules, embedded in a fibromyxoid stroma, which was diagnostic of a chondroid syringoma/mixed tumour. Adipocytes strongly expressed S-100 protein and cytokeratin 14. Transitional elements from epithelial/myoepithelial cells into adipocytes were observed. They coexpressed cytokeratin 14, S-100 protein and vimentin, and showed lipid droplets, desmosome-type junctions, cytoplasmic tonofilaments and basal lamina.
Conclusions: The tumour differed from lipomas with myxoid stroma and from lipoadenomas, which show non-proliferating normal sweat glands admixed with adipose tissue. Because of the similarity to lipomatous pleomorphic adenoma/mixed tumour of salivary glands, we suggest that it should be called 'lipomatous mixed tumour of the skin'.