Microcystic adnexal carcinoma is a rare, locally aggressive neoplasm with both eccrine and follicular differentiation and a high probability of perineural invasion of the centrofacial region. Given the histopathological features of this tumour, early diagnosis is essential for adequate management. This report refers to a case of microcystic adnexal carcinoma of the nasogenial region, with infiltration of the deep planes extending to the anterior wall of the maxillary sinus. Surgical treatment involved wide demolition of the centrofacial region followed by reconstruction using four locoregional flaps: an Indian flap and a Mustardé flap were used for cutaneous reconstruction; a septal flap to support the maxillogenial region; a mucosal flap to separate the nasal cavities.
Microcystic adnexal carcinoma is a rare, locally aggressive neoplasm with both eccrine and follicular differentiation and a high probability of perineural invasion of the centrofacial region. Given the histopathological features of this tumour, early diagnosis is essential for adequate management. This report refers to a case of microcystic adnexal carcinoma of the nasogenial region, with infiltration of the deep planes extending to the anterior wall of the maxillary sinus. Surgical treatment involved wide demolition of the centrofacial region followed by reconstruction using four locoregional flaps: an Indian flap and a Mustardé flap were used for cutaneous reconstruction; a septal flap to support the maxillogenial region; a mucosal flap to separate the nasal cavities.
Microcystic adnexal carcinoma (MAC) is a rare eccrine
gland tumour with low-grade malignancy and a low probability
of metastasis. It generally affects the centrofacial
region in older individuals. A characteristic histological
feature is epithelial proliferation that progressively involves
microcysts, strands, and cords as the tumour invades
the deeper tissues from the skin surface. It has a
severe tendency to neurotropic spread and presents with
widely infiltrated margins. These characteristics make
demolition surgery, especially in the centro-facial region,
particularly challenging -.In this report, a case is presented of MAC of the centrofacial
region, with involvement of the deep planes extending
to the anterior wall of the maxillary sinus. The tumour
was excised with wide demolition which was reconstructed
using 4 local flaps: 2 chondro-mucosal flaps and 2 fasciocutaneous flaps for skeletal support and restoration of
the facial integument with good matching of skin colour.
Case report
In January 2007, an 81-year-old female was seen for an
extensive, hard-rubbery neoplasm (~3 cm in diameter)
fixed to the deep planes and involving the ala nasi and
right nasogenial sulcus (Fig. 1). The case history revealed
that a basalioma of the right genial region, arising in a setting
of actinic keratosis, had been removed several years
previously.
Fig. 1.
An 81-year-old female with a large, hard-rubbery neoplasm involving
ala nasi and right naso-genial sulcus.
Contrast computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) revealed a neoplasm involving the
naso-genial region, ala nasi, and right lip, with infiltration
into the deep planes towards the anterior wall of the maxillary sinus, without actually invading the sinus (Fig. 2). A
biopsy specimen demonstrated the epithelial origin of the
lesion and its proliferative nature.
Fig. 2.
Pre-operative contrast CT shows neoplasm involving naso-genial region,
ala nasi, and right lip, with infiltration into deep planes towards anterior
wall of maxillary sinus, without invading the sinus.
Surgery included demolition of the right half of the nasal
pyramid to the cartilage septum and part of the right nasal
bone, with excision of the cheek skin and anterior wall of
the maxillary sinus to the orbital rim, molar pillar, alveolar
crest, and lip skin (Fig. 3).
Fig. 3.
Intra-operative view: demolition involved right half of nasal pyramid
to cartilage septum and part of right nasal bone, with excision of cheek skin
and anterior wall of maxillary sinus to orbital rim, molar pillar, alveolar crest,
and lip skin.
Intra-operative frozen section analysis of the resection
margins and the infra-orbital nerve was performed.Reconstruction was carried out using a fasciocutaneous
cheek advancement (Mustardé) flap to restore the aesthetic
subunit of the cheek. The nasal pyramid was reconstructed
using a left para-median forehead flap rotated 180° to restore
the half dorsum, tip of the nose, and ala nasi. Cutaneous
lining was achieved with a flip-flap harvested from the septum (Fig. 4). A superiorly pedicled flap, composed
of septal cartilage and mucosa of the septum contralateral
to the lesion, was rotated and sutured to the orbital rim to
support the skin flaps; an inferiorly pedicled flap composed
of the septal mucosa of the affected side was fashioned to
create a septum to separate the nasal cavities (Figs. 5, 6).
Fig. 4.
Flip-flap harvested from septum. A superiorly pedicled flap composed
of septal cartilage and mucosa of septum was rotated and sutured to
orbital rim; an inferiorly pedicled flap composed of septal mucosa was fashioned
to separate nasal cavities.
Fig. 5.
Post-operative view: 1-year follow-up.
Fig. 6.
Post-operative RMN.
Macroscopic examination showed contraction of the upper
lip (1.4 cm in diameter); on incision, a hard-rubbery
neoplasm with indistinct margins was observed in the dermohypodermal
layer, with infiltration of the soft tissues
extending to the maxillary bone.Histopathological examination of the uppermost part of
the reticular derma showed the proliferation of micronests
and solid cords consisting of mildly atypical monomorphous
cuboid cells embedded in an abundant desmoplastic
stroma alternating with keratinic cysts (Fig. 7).
In the deeper plane, there were ductal structures with
two layers of cuboid epithelial cells gradually replaced
by microcysts and prevalently neurotropic monofilament
cords (Fig. 8). Based on the histologic features, a diagnosis of MAC with eccrine differentiation was established.
Fig. 7.
Uppermost part of MAC with micronests, solid cord and keratinic
cysts (10X; H&H).
Fig. 8.
Deeper part of MAC with involvement of ductal structures and
nerves (inset) (25X; H&H).
The differential diagnosis included several other neoplasms:
benign adnexal tumours (syringoma and desmoplastic
trichoepithelioma), locoregional malignant tumours
(malignant mixed tumour of skin appendages, sclerodermiform
basal cell carcinoma of the skin, and neoplasms of
the minor salivary glands), and metastasis of carcinomas
occurring elsewhere, such as breast cancer .
Discussion
The classification of cutaneous adnexal tumours, especially
eccrine tumours, continues to give rise to difficulties
on account of the number of adnexal tumours variously
identified and the variety of names used to describe
them . The basic organising principle is to classify adnexal
tumours according to histologically distinguishable
differentiation (follicular, sebaceous, apocrine, and eccrine)
and their degree of maturity (hamartoma, adenoma,
benign, primitive, and malignant) . Once thought to be
derived from mature adnexal cells, rather than via the
transformation of genetically altered skin cells, the current
most-accredited hypothesis is that adnexal tumours arise from adnexal differentiation of pluripotent cutaneous
stem cells. This explains why some adnexal tumours
can present concomitantly with three different modes of
differentiation: pilosebaceous, eccrine, and apocrine .
Micro-cystic adnexal carcinoma is classified as a malignant
neoplasm with prevalently eccrine differentiation,
which in some cases manifests with pilosebaceous or
apocrine differentiation . Other names used in the histopathological
diagnosis of this tumour are sclerosing
sweat duct carcinoma, eccrine epithelioma, and syringomatous
carcinoma.Excision of the neoplasm requires wide tissue demolition,
because of the wide resection margins necessary. Repairing
the resulting defect poses a considerable reconstructive
challenge, particularly in the centrofacial region. While
free flaps may meet tissue requirements, this cannot be
said for their quality. In addition, as skin is lost due to the
excision, reconstruction of the facial region with free flaps
represents a limitation due to dyschromia after healing.
Therefore, we chose local cutaneous, mucosal, and cartilage
"aps to support the classic Mustardé and Indian flaps
and to achieve an aesthetically acceptable outcome with
more uniform facial skin chromatics -.
Authors: A Baj; P Capparé; L Autelitano; G DE Riu; G A Beltramini; E Segna; A B Giannì Journal: Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital Date: 2013-04 Impact factor: 2.124