Difference between revisions of "Pancreas"
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*Cystadenocarcinoma. | *Cystadenocarcinoma. | ||
== | ==Ductual adenoarcinomas== | ||
*Usually head | *Usually in the head ~60%. | ||
**15% in the body, 5% tail, 20% diffuse (head, body & tail).<ref>PBoD P.950.</ref> | |||
DDx: | DDx: | ||
Line 387: | Line 388: | ||
===Microscopic=== | ===Microscopic=== | ||
Features: | Features:<ref>PBoD P.951.</ref> | ||
*Often glandular, may be solid. | |||
* | |||
*Nuclei. | *Nuclei. | ||
** | **May be bland - little pleomorphism. | ||
** | **Often small nuclei. | ||
**Sometimes coffee-bean appearance. | **Sometimes coffee-bean appearance. | ||
*Cytoplasm - granular, abundant. | *Cytoplasm - granular, abundant. | ||
*Quasi endocrine look. | *Quasi endocrine look. | ||
**May stain positive for endocrine markers. | **May stain positive for endocrine markers. | ||
Other features: | |||
*+/-Necrosis. | |||
*+/-Myxoid degeneration. | |||
*+/-Cells around vessels. | |||
==Cystic tumours== | ==Cystic tumours== |
Revision as of 15:55, 29 May 2010
The pancreas hangs-out in the upper abdomen. It occasionally is afflicited by cancers, the most common of which is very fatal.
Normal anatomy
Divided into three portions: head, body & tail:
- Head:
- Includes unicate process.
- Extend to superior mesenteric vein (by definition).
- Body:
- Superior mesenteric vein to left edge of aorta (by definition).
- Tail:
- Remainder of pancreas.
Pancreatic surgeries
Common pancreatic surgeries include:
- Whipple (includes duodenum).
- Distal pancreatectomy.
- Removal of tail +/- body.
- Total pancreatectomy.
- Often with splenectomy.
General classification of pancreatic tumours
- Metstatses.
- Most common = renal cell carcinoma.
- Primary.
- Endocrine.
- Usually small as hormonally active.
- Exocrine.
- Endocrine.
Pancreas neoplasms in a table
Type | Key feature | Subtypes | Image | IHC | Detailed microscopic | Usual location | Other | DDx |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Serous tumours | cuboidal cells, clear cytoplasm | cystadenoma, borderline t., cystadenocarcinoma | [1], [2] | IHC? | cuboidal cells, clear cytoplasm, central nucleus | body or tail | - | clear cell RCC, oligomucinous mucinous tumours |
Intraductal papillary mucinous tumour (IPMT) |
mucin, no ovarian-like stroma | clear cell variant | [3] | IHC? | papillae, tall columnar mucin-producing cells | head | - | mucious neoplasms (other pancreatic, duodenal) |
Mucinous tumour | mucin, ovarian-like stroma | cystadenoma, borderline t., cystadenocarcinoma | Image? | IHC? | tall columnar mucin-producing cells, ovarian-like stroma | body or tail | - | IPMT, metastatic mucinous tumours |
Solid pseudopapillary tumour |
eosinophilic intracytoplasmic globules | clear cell variant (cytoplasm clear) | [4] | IHC | sheets of cells, focally loosely cohesive, eosinophilic cytoplasm, uniform nuclei with grooves | none | - | ductal adenocarcinoma |
Ductal adenocarcinoma | irregular shaped glands, cytologic atypia | mucinous, spindle cell, mixed ductal-endocrine | [5], [6] | IHC? | glands, sheets, single cells, nuc. atypia, +/-mitoses, +/-necrosis | head | - | ampullary carcinoma, chronic pancreatitis |
Pancreatoblastoma | squamoid nests, whorling | - | Image? | IHC? | squamoid nests of cells, whorling, nested growth, +/-keratinization | none | - | acinar cell carcinoma |
Acinar cell carcinoma | acinar arch. | - | [7] | IHC? | nests or trabeculae, nucleolus, mod. basophilic granular cytoplasm | head (slight predilection) | - | pancreatoblastoma |
Undifferentiated carcinoma with osteoclast-like giant cells | giant cells | - | Image? | IHC? | giant cells, usu. with AIS or inv. ductal adenocarcinoma | head | - | anaplastic carcinoma |
Chronic pancreatitis | fibrosis, loss of acinar tissue | - | [8] | IHC? | loss of acinar tissue with preservation of islets, fibrosis | ? | not a neoplasm, included here as it is in the DDx | ductal adenocarcinoma |
Most important cystic lesions
- Serous.
- Mucinous.
- Ovarian-like stroma.
- Solid pseudopapillay tumours.
- Intraductal papillary mucinous tumour (IPMT).
- No ovarian-like stroma.
Mnemonic SIMS: Serous, IPMT, Mucinous, Solid pseudopapillary tumour.
Mucinous vs. IMPT
IMPT:
- No ovarian-like stroma.
- Usually has total pancreatectomy.
Cystic tumors of pancreas
- Uncommon.
- 10% of cystic lesion (90% pseudocyst).
- Diagnostic difficulties (hard to differentiate pseudocyst & cyst).
Note:
- Pseudocysts: not real cysts... as no lining epithelium.
Cystic tumours
General
- 50% incidental finding.
- Vague Sx.
- Abdo mass.
- Wt loss.
- Jaundice.
Note:
- Usually diagnosed by imaging (CT/MRI, ERCP, Endoscopic ultrasound).
Serous cystic tumours
General
- Cell of origin: intralobular duct cells (ductular cells).
- Glycogen rich - but do not produce mucin.
Subclassication
- Serous microcystic adenoma.
- Many small cysts.
- Serous oligocystic adenoma.
- Large cysts.
- Serous adenocarcinoma - rare.[1]
Note:
- If one mucin +ve cell, tumour = a mucinous tumour.
Characteristics of serous microcystic adenoma
- 1-2% of all exocrine pancratic tumours.
- Female>Male.
- Mean age 66 years.
- Truly benign with no malignant potenial.
- May not require surgical resection.
- May be part of von Hippel-Lindau.
- 50-70% occur in the body and tail.
- Average size 11 cm.
Radiology
- Honey comb appearance.
- "Coin lesion" - well demarcated border.
- May have central scar.
Gross
- Bosulated surface.
- Lobulated.
- No (macroscopic) cysts apparent on gross.
Microscopic
Features:
- Cuboidal cells.
- Glycogen rich.
DDx
- Renal cell carcinoma.
- Lympangioma.
- Hemangiomas.
- Oligocystic mucinous cystic tumors and pseudocysts.
- Have mucin; PAS-D could be used to demonstrate its presence.
Notes:
- Serous adenoma my coexist with aggressive tumours.
Mucinous cystic tumours
- Gastro-entero-pancreatic cell differentiation with hypercellular ovarian-type stroma.
- Stroma --> cellular.
- 2-2.5% of all exocrine pancreatic tumours.
- Almost exclusively in women.
- Mean age - 49 years.
- >80% in body and tail.
- Average size ~10 cm.
Note:
- Looks different than serous tumour.
Subclassification
- Sucinous cystadenoma.
- Borderline mucinous cystic tumour.
- Mucinous cystadenocarcinoma.
Borderline vs. Carcinoma
- Few mitoses in borderline.
Radiology
- Mucinous tumours: multilocular.
- Generally larger than serous.
- Often partially solid and cystic.
- Often calcified.
- Calcification rare in serous.
- Usually tail & body.
Microscopic
Mucinous cystadenoma
Features:[2]
- Simple tall columnar epithelium with large mucin vacuole on apical aspect.
- "Ovarian-type stroma" under epithelium.
- Ovarin-type stroma: high density of small (non-wavy) spindle cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm.
Image: Mucinous cystadenoma - ovary (uchc.edu).
Notes:
- Appearance similar to mucinous cystadenoma in the ovary.
- Mucin stains +ve (intracytoplasmic).
Borderline mucinous cystic tumour
Features:
- May have finger like projections.
- Pseudostratification of epithelium.
Notes:
- Surgery does not change based on diagnosis on frozen section.
- Only question is "Is the margin clear?".
- Borderline tumours are rare.
Carcinoma
- Cells floating in mucin.
Mucinous tumour vs. pseudocyst
mucinous t pseudocyst amylase & lipase low high viscosity high low CEA, CA124 high low
Prognosis:
- Benign looking tumours have the potential to transform into carcinoma.
- No report of assoc. pseudomyxoma peritonei.
- US boards question -- it is an exception ... others one cause it.
- Prognosis of m. cystadenocarcinoma is slightly better than that of ductal adenocarcinoma.
Intraductal papillary mucinous tumour
General
- Often abbreviated IPMT.
- Papillomatous growth pattern.
- Morphologically and biologically distinct from ductal adenocarcinoma, mucinous cystic tumour and ductal papillary hyperplasia.
- Prognosis: favourable, if caught earlier; not much different than ductal adenocarcinoma if caught later.[3]
Another paper: [4]
Epidemiology
- 1% of all exocrine pancreatic tumours.
- More common in males.
- Mean age at presentation 62 years.
- 60-80% occur in the head of the pancreas.
- Average size 4 cm.
Khalifa's theory:
- Nothing but dilation of pancreatic duct + hypersecretion.
Gross
- May be patchy/multifocal.
Microscopic
Features
- Cell enlargement.
- Incr. NC ratio.
- Nuclear crowding and pleomorphism.
- Papillary tufting.
- Mitotic activity.
- Increased mucin production.
Classification IMPT
- Adenoma.
- Borderline mucinous tumour.
- Carcinoma.
Notes:
- No ovarian like stroma.
- Tumour in duct.
- Patient usually not jaundiced... as no obstruction.
- Often diabetes... as pancreas is destroyed.
Gross
- Multiple cystic spaces.
Microscopic
Features:
- Some places -- fronds of benign looking mucin producing epithelium.
- No ovarian type stroma underneath.
Notes:
- If no viable cells in the mucin then not cancer.
- Mucin under pressure can disect through the tissue.
- Borderline tumours are rare.
Pitfalls
- Since it is multifocal may involve large segment of the ductal system.
- Patients often get a total pancreatectomy.
- If intralobular dilated ducts... carcinoma.
- Hard to get a negative margin.
NB - any margin with mucin cells -- badness!!!
- Dilated = mucin producing ducts (???).
- DDx: PAN-IN1.
- Needs a totally pancreatectomy.
- DDx: PAN-IN1.
Solid pseudopapillary tumour
General
- Obscure cell of origin.
- Considered low grade, i.e. prognosis is usually good.
Epidemiology
Features:[5]
- Usually females (M:F=1:9).
- Mean age of presentation third decade (20s).
Management
May be followed radiologically.
Microscopic
Features:[6]
- Solid sheets of cells, focally dyscohesive.
- Eosinophilic cytoplasm.
- Occasionally clear cytoplasm.[7]
- Focal eosinophilic (intracytoplasmic) globules - key feature.
- Uniform nuclei with occasional nuclear grooves.
- +/-Necrosis - creating spaces/cavities.
Image: Solid pseudopapillary tumour (bmj.com).
DDx
- Pseudocyst.
- Cystadenoma.
- Cystadenocarcinoma.
Ductual adenoarcinomas
- Usually in the head ~60%.
- 15% in the body, 5% tail, 20% diffuse (head, body & tail).[8]
DDx:
- Mucinous tumour (may be misdiagnosed as this).
- Serous tumour (microcystic).
Gross
- Necrosis.
- Capsule.
- Hemorrhage.
Microscopic
Features:[9]
- Often glandular, may be solid.
- Nuclei.
- May be bland - little pleomorphism.
- Often small nuclei.
- Sometimes coffee-bean appearance.
- Cytoplasm - granular, abundant.
- Quasi endocrine look.
- May stain positive for endocrine markers.
Other features:
- +/-Necrosis.
- +/-Myxoid degeneration.
- +/-Cells around vessels.
Cystic tumours
- Diagnosed by imaging/with help of images.
Stains
- PAS-D
Prognosis: very favourable (mostly benign).
Cystic tumours of the pancreas
Khalifa's table of cystic tumours:
Sex | Age (years) | Usual site | Typical size (cm) | |
Microcystic | female | 66 | B&T | 11 |
Mucinous | female | 49 | B&T | 10 |
IPMT | male | 62 | H | 4 |
Pseudopapillary | female | 35 | any | 7.5 |
References
- ↑ MK. Half-day.
- ↑ GLP P.489.
- ↑ Maire F, Hammel P, Terris B, et al. (November 2002). "Prognosis of malignant intraductal papillary mucinous tumours of the pancreas after surgical resection. Comparison with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma". Gut 51 (5): 717–22. PMC 1773420. PMID 12377813. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pubmed&pubmedid=12377813.
- ↑ Baiocchi GL, Portolani N, Missale G, et al. (2010). "Intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm of the pancreas (IPMN): clinico-pathological correlations and surgical indications". World J Surg Oncol 8: 25. doi:10.1186/1477-7819-8-25. PMC 2858722. PMID 20374620. http://wjso.com/content/8/1/25.
- ↑ GLP P.493.
- ↑ GLP P.493-5.
- ↑ Serra S, Chetty R (November 2008). "Revision 2: an immunohistochemical approach and evaluation of solid pseudopapillary tumour of the pancreas". J. Clin. Pathol. 61 (11): 1153–9. doi:10.1136/jcp.2008.057828. PMID 18708424. http://jcp.bmj.com/content/61/11/1153.
- ↑ PBoD P.950.
- ↑ PBoD P.951.