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Background: Desmoid tumors (DTs) are rare, locally aggressive soft-tissue neoplasms that often affect women of reproductive age. Pregnancy and prior abdominal surgery or trauma have been associated with tumor development and growth, while imaging frequently overlaps with abdominal-wall endometriosis. We present the case of a 39-year-old woman with an abdominal-wall DT and provide a narrative review of the literature focused on pregnancy/postpartum patterns, differential diagnosis, and management. Methods: A narrative review of PubMed/MEDLINE and Web of Science (January 1982-December 2024) was conducted. We included English-language case reports/series, narrative/descriptive reviews, and consensus statements relevant to DTs in pregnancy or reproductive-age women, emphasizing abdominal-wall disease. Results: The patient's right abdominal-wall mass enlarged during pregnancy and further post-partum imaging repeatedly suggested endometriosis. En bloc resection revealed desmoid-type fibromatosis composed of bland spindle cells in a collagenous stroma, with nuclear β-catenin and lymphoid enhancer-binding factor 1 (LEF1) positivity on immunohistochemistry. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at 12 months showed no recurrence. Across included studies, pregnancy and post-partum enlargement is common, abdominal-wall DTs frequently mimic scar endometriosis, and pre-operative ultrasound has limited specificity. Current practice supports watch-and-wait for stable, asymptomatic lesions and function-preserving surgery for symptomatic progression, while systemic options (anti-estrogens, low-dose chemotherapy, and tyrosine kinase inhibitors) are reserved for progressive or unresectable disease. Recurrence risk relates to age, size, site, and β-catenin status; future pregnancy is not contraindicated. Conclusions: Abdominal-wall DTs, although rare, should be considered in the differential diagnosis of reproductive-age women presenting with abdominal-wall masses, particularly during or after pregnancy.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.3390/jcm14217815

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2025-11-03T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

14

Keywords

abdominal wall, abdominal-wall endometriosis, desmoid tumor, desmoid-type fibromatosis, differential diagnosis, pregnancy