Cervical polyps

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Cervical polyps are common entities that can be bothersome and are thus removed.

Endocervical polyps not otherwise specified

Clinical

  • Usually 30-50 years old.
  • Cause bleeding - due to trauma (???).

Microscopic

Features:

  • May have mixed epithelium, i.e. squamous and endocervical type (with eosinophilic mucin).
    • Endocervical epithelium should have nuclei like that in the colon, i.e. small, round & basal.
  • Polypoid shape.
  • +/-Inflammation.
  • +/-Squamous metaplasia.

Negatives:

  • No mitoses.
  • No nuclear atypia.
  • No stromal proliferation.

Notes:

  • No histologic features separate cervical polyps from benign endocervical mucosa; ergo, they are often signed-out as "... consistent with cervical polyp."

Ref.:[1]

Fibroepithelial stromal polyp

General

  • Usually easy to recognize.[2]

Microscopic

Features:[2]

  • Bland nuclei.
  • Hypocellular.

Pseudosarcomatous fibroepithelial stromal polyp

General

  • Uncommon.
  • Wide age range.
  • May be misdiagnosed as a sarcoma and overtreated.[2]
  • Similar lesions in vagina and vulva.

Microscopic

Features:[2]

  • Hypercellularity.
  • Marked nuclear pleomorphism (common).
  • +/-High mitotic rate ( > 10 mitoses / 10 HPF).
  • +/-Atypical mitoses.
  • No identifiable margin between lesion and normal - important feature.
  • Scattered multinucleated stromal cells - usu. close to epithelium.

IHC

  • Desmin +ve (common).
  • SMA usu. -ve.

See also

References

  1. http://pathologyoutlines.com/cervix.html#endocervpolyp
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Nucci, MR.; Young, RH.; Fletcher, CD. (Feb 2000). "Cellular pseudosarcomatous fibroepithelial stromal polyps of the lower female genital tract: an underrecognized lesion often misdiagnosed as sarcoma.". Am J Surg Pathol 24 (2): 231-40. PMID 10680891.