Pelvic pain is a common gynecologic complaint. Retroperitoneal pelvic tumors are rarely a cause of pelvic pain. Neurofibroma is an uncommon pelvic retroperitoneal tumor, and only 17 cases are reported to date. A 38-year-old woman with chronic pelvic pain had a soft fixed mass that was the size of an orange in the right posterolateral fornix, with a normal uterus on pelvic examination, and a mass of 6.3 × 5.2 cm with mixed echotexture on the right side separate from both ovaries on transvaginal ultrasonography. A provisional diagnosis of retroperitoneal mass probably a retroperitoneal teratoma was made. Laparoscopy was performed; an ill-defined retroperitoneal soft tissue mass of about 6 cm was seen on the right pararectal and presacral area, displacing the rectum toward the left side. The mass was soft and jellylike without a cyst wall. Histopathologic study and immunohistochemistry results were consistent with neurofibroma of the sacrococcygeal regions. To our knowledge this is the third case of sacrococcygeal neurofibroma treated by complete laparoscopic excision. Gynecologists should keep sacrococcygeal neurofibroma as a differential diagnosis of pelvic pain with atypical location of a pelvic mass. A high index of suspicion and an appropriate imaging technique are needed for accurate diagnosis. Laparoscopy seems to be a safe and effective method of managing retroperitoneal presacral neurofibromas.
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