7 research outputs found
Sinonasal Tract and Nasopharyngeal Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma: A Clinicopathologic and Immunophenotypic Study of 86 Cases
The article of record as published may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12105-013-0487-3‘Primary sinonasal tract and nasopharyngeal
adenoid cystic carcinomas (STACC) are uncommon
tumors that are frequently misclassified, resulting in inappropriate
clinical management. Eighty-six cases of STACC
included 45 females and 41 males, aged 12–91 years (mean
54.4 years). Patients presented most frequently with
obstructive symptoms (n = 54), followed by epistaxis
(n = 23), auditory symptoms (n = 12), nerve symptoms
(n = 11), nasal discharge (n = 11), and/or visual symptoms
(n = 10), present for a mean of 18.2 months. The
tumors involved the nasal cavity alone (n = 25), nasopharynx
alone (n = 13), maxillary sinus alone (n = 4), or
a combination of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses
(n = 44), with a mean size of 3.7 cm. Patients presented
equally between low and high stage disease: stage I and II
(n = 42) or stage III and IV (n = 44) disease. Histologically,
the tumors were invasive (bone: n = 66; neural:
n = 47; lymphovascular: n = 33), composed of a variety
of growth patterns, including cribriform (n = 33), tubular
(n = 16), and solid (n = 9), although frequently a combination
of these patterns was seen within a single tumor.
Pleomorphism was mild with an intermediate N:C ratio in
cells containing hyperchromatic nuclei. Reduplicated
basement membrane and glycosaminoglycan material was
commonly seen. Necrosis (n = 16) and atypical mitotic
figures (n = 11) were infrequently present. Pleomorphic
adenoma was present in 9 cases; de-differentiation was
seen in two patients. Immunohistochemical studies showed
positive reactions for pan-cytokeratin, CK7, CK5/6,
CAM5.2, and EMA, with myoepithelial reactivity with
SMA, p63, calponin, S100 protein and SMMHC. CD117,
CEA, GFAP and p16 were variably present. CK20 and HR
HPV were negative. STACC needs to be considered in the
differential diagnosis of most sinonasal malignancies,
particularly poorly differentiated carcinoma, olfactory
neuroblastoma and pleomorphic adenoma. Surgery
(n = 82), often accompanied by radiation therapy
(n = 36), was generally employed. A majority of patients
developed a recurrence (n = 52) 2–144 months after initial
presentation. Overall mean follow-up was 19.4 years
(range 0.4–37.5 years): 46 patients died with disease (mean
6.4 years); 5 were alive with disease (mean 5.4 years), and
35 patients were either alive or had died of unrelated causes
(mean 16.3 years). ACC of the SNT is uncommon.
Recurrences are common. The following parameters, when
present, suggest an increased incidence of either recurrence
or dying with disease: mixed site of involvement, high
stage disease (stage IV), skull base involvement, tumor
recurrence, a solid histology, perineural invasion, bone
invasion, and lymphovascular invasion
A clinicopathologic study of minimally invasive follicular carcinoma of the thyroid gland with a review of the english literature
BACKGROUND. The criteria for minimally invasive (low grade) follicular carcinoma of the thyroid (MI) remain controversial, often resulting in unnecessary treatment. METHODS. The records of 130 patients with minimally invasive (MI) follicular thyroid carcinoma were retrieved from the files of the Endocrine Tumor Registry of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology. RESULTS. Ninety-five patients were confirmed to have MI based on the authors\u27 criteria of small-to-medium vessel invasion, capsular invasion of up to full thickness, no parenchymal tumor extension, and no tumor necrosis (patients with oxyphilic tumors were excluded). The remaining 35 patients had tumors that were reclassified as not low grade based on large vessel invasion, extension into parenchyma, and tumor necrosis (oxyphilic cases excluded). The MI patients included 67 women and 28 men, ages 20-95 years (average, 42.0 years). Nearly all patients presented with a thyroid mass (n = 90 patients). The mean tumor size was 2.8 cm. Histologic features examined for tumor classification included cellularity, capsule nature, capsular invasion, vascular invasion, extension into parenchyma, cytoplasmic oxyphilia, mitotic activity, and necrosis. All patients were treated with surgical excision. Adjuvant radioactive iodine therapy was performed in 24 patients. Five patients developed recurrent disease: four were alive or had died without evidence of disease after additional treatment (mean, 18.1 years), and one patient died with disease (MI tumor) at 15.1 years. All of the remaining patients were disease free (mean follow-up, 16.5 years). CONCLUSIONS. There are reproducible histologic criteria to diagnose patients with MI follicular carcinoma. The overall excellent long term prognosis and a good patient outcome suggests that no additional surgery is necessary