Soft tissue ยท Schwann cellICD-10 D36

Granular cell tumour

Abrikossoff tumour; granular cell myoblastoma (older, incorrect โ€” they are Schwann-cell, not muscle-cell, in origin)

Granular cell tumour is an uncommon soft-tissue tumour of Schwann-cell origin (S100-positive) characterised by sheets of polygonal cells with abundant granular eosinophilic cytoplasm. The tongue is the commonest single site (~30%), followed by skin and subcutis (~30%) โ€” particularly head, neck, breast and proximal upper limb โ€” with a smaller proportion in the gastrointestinal tract, breast parenchyma and respiratory tree. The vast majority (~98%) are benign, behaving as a slow-growing, indolent dermal/subcutaneous nodule. The malignant variant is rare (<2%) but aggressive, with high rates of regional and distant metastasis. Skin biopsy frequently shows florid pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia of the overlying epidermis that can be misdiagnosed as squamous cell carcinoma โ€” a critical pitfall that requires the histopathologist to recognise the underlying granular cells.

CurrentLast reviewed 26 April 2026
Clinical image of Granular cell tumour
Granular cell tumour. Image sourced from DermNet New Zealand. Used under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. No endorsement implied.

Clinical features

  • Solitary firm, skin-coloured to pink/yellow dermal/subcutaneous nodule, usually 1โ€“3 cm.
  • Site distribution โ€” tongue ~30%, skin/subcutis ~30% (head/neck, breast, proximal upper limb), GI tract, breast, lung.
  • Median age 30โ€“60; F>M (~2:1); commoner in patients of African descent.
  • Multiple lesions in 5โ€“25%; can be associated with rare syndromes (Noonan, LEOPARD, neurofibromatosis 1).
  • Asymptomatic; may itch or feel tethered to deeper structures.

Histology & pitfalls

  • Sheets and nests of large polygonal cells with abundant eosinophilic granular cytoplasm and small bland nuclei.
  • PAS-positive, diastase-resistant cytoplasmic granules (lysosomes).
  • Strongly S100, SOX10, CD68, NKI/C3 positive โ€” confirming Schwann-cell origin.
  • Frequently shows florid pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia of the overlying epidermis โ€” a common cause of misdiagnosis as well-differentiated SCC on superficial biopsy. Always include a deep biopsy if granular cell tumour is suspected; the granular cell component is in the dermis.
  • Fanburg-Smith criteria for malignancy (โ‰ฅ3 of 6 features = malignant; 1โ€“2 = atypical):
    • Necrosis
    • Spindling
    • Vesicular nuclei with prominent nucleoli
    • High N:C ratio
    • Mitotic count >2/10 HPF
    • Pleomorphism

Management

  • Benign granular cell tumour: complete surgical excision with narrow (3โ€“5 mm) margins; recurrence ~5% with incomplete excision.
  • Atypical or malignant granular cell tumour: wide local excision with 2 cm margins; sentinel lymph node biopsy considered; referral to sarcoma MDT.
  • Imaging staging (CT chest/abdomen/pelvis) for atypical/malignant disease.
  • Adjuvant radiotherapy for incomplete margins or high-risk disease.
  • Systemic therapy for metastatic disease โ€” limited evidence; multikinase inhibitors (pazopanib), mTOR inhibitors and case reports of immune checkpoint activity.

Prognosis

Benign GCT โ€” excellent; cure with complete excision. Malignant GCT โ€” 5-year overall survival 30โ€“60%; high local recurrence and distant metastasis (lung, liver, bone, lymph nodes). Long-term surveillance for any atypical or malignant lesion.

References

  1. Fanburg-Smith JC et al. Malignant granular cell tumor of soft tissue: diagnostic criteria and clinicopathologic correlation. Am J Surg Pathol; 1998.
  2. Vered M et al. Granular cell tumor of the oral cavity: a clinicopathological study. J Oral Pathol Med; 2009.

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