Adenocarcinoma of the uterine cervix

From Libre Pathology
Revision as of 20:34, 23 June 2016 by Michael (talk | contribs) (→‎IHC)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Adenocarcinoma of the uterine cervix is a relative uncommon form of cervical cancer. Like the more common squamous cell carcinoma, it is associated strongly with the human papilloma virus.

Adenocarcinoma of the uterine cervix
Diagnosis in short

Cervical adenocarcinoma. H&E stain.
LM DDx microglandular hyperplasia, endocervical adenocarcinoma in situ, metastatic adenocarcinoma (e.g. endometrioid endometrial carcinoma, serous endometrial carcinoma, colorectal adenocarcinoma), villoglandular adenocarcinoma, glassy cell carcinoma, clear cell carcinoma of the cervix
IHC p16 +ve, CEA +ve, vimentin -ve, ER -ve, PR -ve
Site uterine cervix - endocervical canal

Prevalence uncommon
Prognosis fairly good
Clin. DDx other cervical tumours
Treatment radical trachelectomy or radical hysterectomy

It is also known as endocervical adenocarcinoma and cervical adenocarcinoma.

Very well-differentiated adenocarcinoma of the cervix is covered in minimal deviation adenocarcinoma of the uterine cervix.

General

  • Adenocarcinoma of the cervix is much less common than squamous dysplasia of the cervix/SCC of the cervix.
  • Arises from the endocervical glands.
  • Usually HPV related.
  • Non-HPV related adenocarcinoma may be syndromic - Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, Li-Fraumeni syndrome.[1]

Microscopic

Features:

  • Cells with moderate cytoplasm, typically with basally stratfied nuclei.
  • Cytologic changes:
    • Nuclear hyperchromasia.
    • Nuclear pseudostratification.
    • Nuclear enlargement.
  • Stromal changes - "desmoplastic stroma/desmoplastic reaction".
    • Fibrosis/streaming cells.
  • Abnormal architecture:
    • Gland fusion.
    • Glands too deep -- very fuzzy criterion.

Notes:

  • AIS changes - similar to colonic dysplasia.
  • AIS may occur together with CIN.
    • Not infrequently they (AIS, CIN) occur together - both are due, indirectly, to HPV infection.
  • May be difficult to be certain of invasion.
    • A feature suggestive of invasion is cytoplasmic eosinophilia.

DDx:

Images

IHC

Features for diagnosis:

  • p16 +ve.
    • May be negative ~25% of cases in one series.[2]
  • Ki-67 -- high.

Uterus vs. cervix:[3]

  • Cervix (typically): CEA +ve, p16 +ve.
    • ER -ve, PR -ve, vimentin -ve.
  • Uterus (typically): vimentin +ve, ER +ve, PR +ve.
    • CEA -ve, p16 -ve.

See also

References

  1. Karamurzin, YS.; Kiyokawa, T.; Parkash, V.; Jotwani, AR.; Patel, P.; Pike, MC.; Soslow, RA.; Park, KJ. (Nov 2015). "Gastric-type Endocervical Adenocarcinoma: An Aggressive Tumor With Unusual Metastatic Patterns and Poor Prognosis.". Am J Surg Pathol 39 (11): 1449-57. doi:10.1097/PAS.0000000000000532. PMID 26457350.
  2. Izadi-Mood, N.; Asadi, K.; Shojaei, H.; Sarmadi, S.; Ahmadi, SA.; Sani, S.; Chelavi, LH. (May 2012). "Potential diagnostic value of P16 expression in premalignant and malignant cervical lesions.". J Res Med Sci 17 (5): 428-33. PMID 23626605.
  3. Hu, WW.; Tao, JH.; Li, GM.; Xu, X.; Yang, XM. (Mar 2010). "[Value of ER, VIM, CEA and p16 detection in the diagnosis and differential diagnosis of primary endocervical and endometrial adenocarcinomas].". Nan Fang Yi Ke Da Xue Xue Bao 30 (3): 526-8, 531. PMID 20335127.