2 research outputs found
Malignant mixed sex cord-stromal tumour in a stallion.
A 30-year-old Standardbred stallion was examined for unilateral scrotal swelling. Physical and
ultrasound examinations revealed a painless enlarged left testis with a non-homogeneous
echogenicity, when compared with the controlateral testis. The stallion underwent left unilateral
orchiectomy. Grossly, the excised testis was irregularly enlarged (12 ×9×9cm; weight: 530g) and
firm. The sections showed that testicular parenchyma was replaced by a lobulated, greyish-white
mass, which involved the epididymal head. At microscopy, a dual Leydig and Sertoli cell tumour
component could be seen. Neoplastic Sertoli cells were prevalent and presented pleomorphic cells,
mitotic figures and occasional vascular invasion. Tumour patterns showed tubular and solid areas,
cord-like or diffuse in appearance, among which newly formed Leydig cell nests and low-density
fibrillar bundles were interposed. Immunohistochemically, a weak to moderate immunostaining for
vimentin, AE1/AE3 cytokeratin, α-1-antitrypsin and CD99 antigens was found in the growing
Sertoli cells, whose nuclear MIB-1 labelling index scored 13±2%. The Leydig tumour cells, on the
other hand, displayed a moderate to strong positivity for α-inhibin, vimentin, AE1/AE3 cytokeratin,
neurone-specific enolase and CD99. On the basis of these findings, a diagnosis of malignant mixed
sex cord-stromal tumour was made