[5] While some researchers have proposed that a SFT occupying at least 40% of the affected hemithorax be considered a "giant solitary fibrous tumor",[6] no such "giant" variant has yet been recognized within the most widely used pleural tumor classification scheme.
Recurrent somatic fusions of the two genes, NGFI-A–binding protein 2 (NAB2) and STAT6, located at chromosomal region 12q13, have been identified in solitary fibrous tumors.
[7] The treatment of choice for both benign and malignant SFT is complete en bloc surgical resection.
Approximately 63% of patients will have a recurrence of their tumor, of which more than half will succumb to disease progression within two years.
[citation needed] Over the years pleural SFTs acquired a number of synonyms, including localized fibrous tumor, benign mesothelioma, localized fibrous mesothelioma, submesothelial fibroma, and pleural fibroma.