Laryngeal Sarcomatoid Carcinoma With Rhabdomyoblastic Differentiation: A Potential Pitfall for Misdiagnosis As Rhabdomyosarcoma

Cureus. 2023 Jun 26;15(6):e40990. doi: 10.7759/cureus.40990. eCollection 2023 Jun.

Abstract

Sarcomatoid carcinoma (SC) of the larynx is an uncommon subtype of squamous cell carcinoma which shows both squamous carcinoma and a sarcomatous component, including heterologous elements. The presence of rhabdomyosarcomatous elements in the larynx is extremely rare. Diagnosis of SC can be particularly challenging when the malignant epithelial component is not evident. We present a case of SC in a 72-year-old man with a superficial exophytic mass in the vocal cord initially misdiagnosed as rhabdomyosarcoma due to a predominant spindle cell component with rhabdomyoblastic features by morphology and immunohistochemistry. This case report aims to increase awareness that a rhabdomyoblastic heterologous component can be present in SC of the larynx and to consider this diagnosis in a mucosal exophytic malignant spindle cell neoplasm, even in the absence of epithelial differentiation.

Keywords: larynx; rhabdomyoblastic differentiation; rhabdomyosarcoma; sarcomatoid carcinoma; spindle cell squamous carcinoma.

Publication types

  • Case Reports