| Literature DB >> 20596994 |
Abstract
Histologic grade is a significant predictor of outcome in salivary gland carcinomas. However, the sheer variety of tumor type and the rarity of these tumors pose challenges to devising highly predictive grading schemes. As our knowledge base has evolved, it is clear that carcinoma ex pleomorphic adenoma is not automatically a high grade tumor as is traditionally suggested. These tumors should be further qualified as to type/grade of carcinoma and extent, since intracapsular and minimally invasive carcinomas ex pleomorphic adenoma behave favorably. The two carcinoma types for which grading schemes are common include adenoid cystic carcinoma and mucoepidermoid carcinoma. Adenoid cystic carcinomas are graded based solely on pattern with solid components portending a worse prognosis. Occasionally, adenoid cystic carcinomas may undergo transformation to pleomorphic high grade carcinomas. This feature confers a high propensity for lymph node metastasis and should thus be reported to alert the clinical team. Mucoepidermoid carcinomas are graded in a three tier fashion based on a constellation of features including cystic component, border, mitoses, anaplasia, and perineural invasion among others. All grading schemes are somewhat cumbersome, intimidating and occasionally ambiguous, but evidence suggests that using a scheme consistently shows greater reproducibility than using an intuitive approach. The intermediate grade category demonstrates the most variability between grading systems and thus the most controversy in management. In the AFIP system intermediate grade tumors cluster with high grade tumors, while in the Brandwein system, they cluster with low grade tumors.Entities:
Keywords: Adenoid cystic carcinoma; Carcinoma ex pleomorphic adenoma; Grading; High grade transformation; Mucoepidermoid carcinoma; Salivary carcinoma
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20596994 PMCID: PMC2807532 DOI: 10.1007/s12105-009-0102-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Head Neck Pathol ISSN: 1936-055X
General categories of management of primary salivary gland carcinomas [3]
| Surgery alone | Surgery and radiotherapy | Additional neck dissection | Systemic chemotherapy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative margins | Close (<2 mm) or positive margins | All cN+ | Metastatic or unresectable disease |
| cN0 but high grade histology | |||
| Low grade histology | High grade histology | cN0 but high risk (angioinvasive) histologic subtype | |
| Low risk (non angioinvasive, non infiltrative) histologic subtype | High risk (highly infiltrative) histologic subtype | cN0 but high T stage (T3 or T4) | |
| Low T stage (T1 or T2) | High T stage (T3 or T4) | ||
| pN+ | |||
| Perineural invasiona |
T = tumor stage in TNM classification, cN+ = clinically node positive, cN0 = clinically node negative, pN+ = pathologically node positive
aSomewhat controversial depending on tumor type
Risk stratification of WHO [1] recognized salivary gland malignancies
| Low risk | High Risk |
|---|---|
| Acinic cell carcinoma | Sebaceous carcinoma and lymphadenocarcinoma |
| Low grade mucoepidermoid carcinomaa | High grade mucoepidermoid carcinomaa |
| Epithelial-myoepithelial carcinoma | Adenoid cystic carcinomab |
| Polymorphous low grade adenocarcinoma | Mucinous adenocarcinoma |
| Clear cell carcinoma | Squamous cell carcinoma |
| Basal cell adenocarcinoma | Small cell carcinoma |
| Low grade salivary duct carcinoma (low grade cribriform cystadenocarcinoma) | Large cell carcinoma |
| Myoepithelial carcinoma | Lymphoepithelial carcinoma |
| Oncocytic carcinoma | Metastasizing pleomorphic adenoma |
| Carcinoma ex pleomorphic adenoma (intracapsular/minimally invasive or with low grade histology) | Carcinoma ex pleomorphic adenoma (widely invasive or high grade histology) |
| Sialoblastoma | Carcinosarcoma |
| Adenocarcinoma NOS and Cystadenocarcinoma, low gradea | Adenocarcinoma and cystadenocarcinoma, NOS, high gradea |
aIntermediate grade variants of these tumors are controversial in the assignment of risk. For mucoepidermoid carcinoma this may depend on grading scheme used. For adenocarcinoma NOS, there is little data, but what is present suggests that intermediate grade should be placed in the high risk group
bAdenoid cystic carcinomas are all considered high risk in terms of local recurrence, but only solid adenoid cystic carcinoma (i.e. high pattern grade) is considered high risk for nodal metastasis
Fig. 1Minimally invasive carcinoma ex pleomorphic adenoma. The pleomorphic adenoma component with sclerosis is seen on the right, and the minor low grade carcinoma component infiltrates the surrounding adipose tissue. This carcinoma was immunophenotypically a myoepithelial carcinoma (stains not shown)
Fig. 2The various patterns/grades of adenoid cystic carcinoma. a Tubular, b cribriform, c solid. All grades are cytologically monomorphic and retain small dark angulated nuclear features
Comparison of common pattern grading schemes in adenoid cystic carcinoma
| Grade | Perzin et al. [ | Grade | Spiro et al. [ |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Predominantly tubular, no solid component | 1 | Mostly tubular or cribriform (no stipulations on minor solid components) |
| 2 | Predominantly cribriform, solid component <30% acceptable | ||
| 3 | Solid component >30% | ||
| 2 | 50% solid | ||
| 3 | Mostly solid |
Fig. 3Adenoid cystic carcinoma with high grade transformation. a A conventional cribriform component with monomorphic nuclei on top transitions to a pleomorphic highly atypical adenocarcinoma on bottom. b The transformed component metastasized to a cervical lymph node
Comparison of solid conventional adenoid cystic carcinoma and high grade transformationa
| Features | Solid conventional adenoid cystic carcinoma | Adenoid cystic carcinoma with high grade transformation |
|---|---|---|
| Chromatin | Dark, homogeneous | Vesicular or heterogeneously dispersed |
| Nuclear membranes | Delicate | Thickened or irregular |
| Nucleoli | Present but indistinct | Prominent central |
| Cytoplasm | Scant to nearly absent | Scant to moderate |
| Comedonecrosis | Focally present, usually punctuate | Often present, punctuate to large zones |
| Microcalcifications | Rarely present | Often present |
| Mitoses | Generally <10/hpf | Usually >10/hpf |
| Ki-67 | <50% | >50% |
Bold = Major Features
aAdapted from Seethala et al. [15]
Comparison of Grading Systems for Mucoepidermoid Carcinoma
| Modified Healey [ | AFIP [ | Brandwein [ |
|---|---|---|
| Qualitative | Point based | Point based |
| Low grade | Intracystic component <20% = 2pts | Intracystic component <25% = 2pts |
| Macrocysts, microcysts, transition with excretory ducts | Neural invasion present = 2pts | Tumor invades in small nests and islands = 2pts |
| Differentiated Mucin producing Epidermoid Cells, often in a 1:1 ration; minimal to moderate intermediate cell population | Necrosis present = 3pts | Pronounced nuclear atypia = 2pts |
| Daughter cyst proliferation from large cysts | ||
| Minimal to absent pleomorphism, rare mitoses | ||
| Broad-front, often circumscribed invasion | ||
| Pools of extravasated mucin with stromal reaction | ||
| Intermediate grade | Mitosis (4 or more per 10 HPF) = 3pts | Lymphatic and/or vascular invasion = 3pts |
| No macrocysts, few microcysts, solid nests of cells | Anaplasia = 4pts | Bony invasion = 3pts |
| Large duct not conspicuous | >4mitoses per 10 HPF = 3pts | |
| Slight to moderate pleomorphism, few mitoses, prominent nuclei and nucleoli | ||
| Invasive quality, usually well difined and uncircumscribed | ||
| Chronic inflammation at periphery, fibrosis separates nests of cells and groups of nests | ||
| High grade | Perineural spread = 3pts | |
| No macrocysts, predominantly solid but may be nearly all glandular | Necrosis = 3pts | |
| Cell constituents range from poorly differentiated to recognizable epidermoid and intermediate to ductal type adenocarcinoma | ||
| Considerable pleomorphism, easily found mitoses | ||
| Unquestionable soft tissue, perineural and intravascular invasion | ||
| Chronic inflammation less prominent, desmoplasia of stroma may outline invasive clusters | ||
Fig. 4Grading of mucoepidermoid carcinoma. a A low grade tumor demonstrating a well demarcated border, macrocystic spaces and a bland cyst lining. b An intermediate grade tumor demonstrating a more solid growth with only few microcysts, and focal infiltration. It is important to note that the Brandwein system may potentially classify this tumor as high grade (infiltration if these nests are considered ‘small enough’, and intracystic component <25% equates to 4 points), while the AFIP grading system still categorizes this tumor as low grade (score is only 2/14). c High grade mucoepidermoid carcinoma with no cystic spaces and a highly infiltrative growth pattern. Inset: showing anaplasia or pronounced nuclear atypia
Fig. 5Oncocytic mucoepidermoid carcinoma. a This solid highly infiltrative oncocytic lesion would be classified in some grading schemes as high grade. b The tumor cells have abundant granular eosinophilic cytoplasm. c Only rare foci with mucus cells are noted. This patient suffered one recurrence 8 years after diagnosis but is currently free of disease for almost 5 years