Context.—: Gastrointestinal manifestations of Kaposi sarcoma are rare but may cause morbidity. Lower gastrointestinal involvement is particularly rare and lesions may resemble conventional bowel polyps.
Objective.—: To study 15 patients who presented with lower gastrointestinal tract Kaposi sarcoma with polypoid architecture.
Design.—: The surgical pathology files of the departments of pathology at multiple institutions were searched for cases of Kaposi sarcoma forming polyps in the lower gastrointestinal tract (jejunum, colon, rectum); 15 cases with such features were identified. Clinicopathologic information was extracted from the medical record and documented by reviewing individual hematoxylin-eosin stained slides.
Results.—: The patients were 13 men and 2 women aged 26-80 years (median = 44 years). Gastrointestinal tract involvement was multifocal in 11 cases and unifocal in 4. The tumors involved the rectum, recto-sigmoid junction, cecum, ascending colon, transverse colon, and descending colon and presented as polypoid lesions measuring 0.2-2.1 cm. Six patients had upper gastrointestinal tract involvement in addition to lower gastrointestinal lesions. Histologically the tumors were characterized in 6 cases by a dense spindle cell proliferation in the lamina propria; however, the remaining cases showed only a subtle fascicular spindle cell proliferation in the lamina propria that did not form an expansile mass.
Conclusions.—: Biopsies of gastrointestinal polyps showing absence of the common features of hyperplastic or adenomatous polyps, particularly in immunocompromised patients, should be carefully examined for the presence of a stromal spindle cell proliferation. Use of immunohistochemical stains, particularly human herpesvirus-8, can help in establishing the correct diagnosis.
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