Korean J Cytopathol.  2001 Dec;12(2):105-110.

Cytologic Features of the Chordoma: Report of five cases

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

Abstract

Chordoma is a rare, clinically and morphologically well characterized tumor, which arises from remnants of the notochord. The majority(60%) occurs in the sacrococcygeal region, with 25% in the clival region, and 15% in the spine. Although most chordomas do not develop metastasis, the long term prognosis is very poor due to local progressive tumor growth and tendency to recur if incompletely excised. The chordoma has characteristic cytologic features which make a preoperative diagnosis possible. We reviewed the cytologic findings of five patients with chordoma(one oropharynx, two clivus, and two sacrum). The patients were three male and two female, aged from 29 to 77 years(mean 60). Of five chordomas, there were local recurrences in two cases and metastasis of lymph node in one case. Four were FNA smears and one was squash smear taken from intraoperative consultation. All five cases show similar cytologic features. The dominating tumor cells were large with round nuclei and pale-stained vacuolated cytoplasm. The small round uniform cells and short spindle- shaped cells were frequently noted. The cells were surrounded by myxoid or mucoid matrix. The chordoma has characteristic cytologic features which make a preoperative diagnosis possible.

Keyword

Chordoma; Fine needle aspiration cytology

MeSH Terms

Chordoma*
Cranial Fossa, Posterior
Cytoplasm
Diagnosis
Female
Humans
Lymph Nodes
Male
Neoplasm Metastasis
Notochord
Oropharynx
Prognosis
Recurrence
Sacrococcygeal Region
Spine
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