| Literature DB >> 29275530 |
Emilija Manojlovic-Gacic1, Britt Edén Engström2, Olivera Casar-Borota3,4.
Abstract
Non-functioning pituitary neuroendocrine tumors do not cause endocrine symptoms related to hypersecretion of adenohypophyseal hormones and are clinically characterized by symptoms due to growing sellar tumor mass. Histopathological classification of this tumor group has always been challenging due to their heterogeneity, limited knowledge on their biology, and diverse methodological problems. We have searched PubMed database for data related to the histopathological classification of non-functioning pituitary tumors and methods for its application. Principles of the classification and grading presented in the recently released 4th edition of the World Health Organization classification of endocrine tumors have been summarized. Based on the expression of anterior pituitary hormones and pituitary specific transcription factors, gonadotroph tumors dominate within the group of clinically non-functioning tumors, followed by corticotroph type; however, other less common types of the non-functioning tumors can be identified. Assessment of tumor cell proliferation is important to identify "high-risk adenomas." A few subtypes of non-functioning tumors belong to the category of potentially aggressive tumors, independent of the cell proliferation rate. Here, we present up to date criteria for the classification of clinically non-functioning pituitary tumors, offer a diagnostic approach for the routine clinical use, and emphasize a need for inclusion of prognostic and predictive markers in the classification.Entities:
Keywords: Immunohistochemistry; Non-functioning pituitary neuroendocrine tumor; Pituitary adenoma; Transcription factors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29275530 PMCID: PMC5849671 DOI: 10.1007/s11102-017-0855-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pituitary ISSN: 1386-341X Impact factor: 4.107
Histopathological types of NF-PitNETs with diagnostic and potential prognostic/predictive immunohistochemical markers
| NF-PitNET type | Transcriptional factor | Hormone staining | LMWCK | Prognostic/predictive markers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gonadotroph | SF-1 (GATA-2, ERα) | β-FSH, β-LH, α-SU | Variable | ERα, SSTRs |
| Corticotropha | T-Pit | ACTH | Diffuse | |
| Type 1 (densely granulated) | T-Pit | Diffuse, strong ACTH | Diffuse | |
| Type 2 (sparsely granulated) | T-Pit | Weak, patchy ACTH | Diffuse | |
| Crooke-cell | T-Pit | Periphery of the cell | Ring-like | |
| Somatotroph | Pit-1 | GH | SSTRs | |
| Sparsely granulateda | Pit-1 | Diffuse, strong | Fibrous body | |
| Densely granulated | Pit-1 | Weak, patchy | Diffuse | |
| Thyrotroph | Pit-1 (GATA-2) | TSH, α-SU | Variable | SSTRs |
| Lactotroph | Pit-1 (ERα) | PRL | Variable | |
| Sparsely granulated | Pit-1 (ERα) | Perinuclear, Golgi zone PRL | Variable | |
| Densely granulated | Pit-1 (ERα) | Diffuse PRL | Variable | |
| Acidophilic stem cell adenoma | Pit-1 (ERα) | Focal and variable PRL, GH | Fibrous body (inconsistent) | |
| Plurihormonal Pit-1a | Pit-1 | GH, PRL, TSH, α-SU | Variable | |
| Null-cell | None | None | Variable | |
| Double/triple NF-PitNET | More than one | Variable | Variable |
Increased proliferation and MRI-confirmed invasion are criteria for high-risk adenoma in all types. MGMT is a potential predictive marker for response to temozolomide in aggressive PitNETs of all types
aNF-PitNET types with potential aggressive biological behavior
Fig. 1Importance of pituitary transcription factors in PitNETs with sparse or no hormone-immunolabeling: NF-gonadotroph tumor 1a hematoxylin eosin staining 1b negative immunolabeling for gonadotroph hormones (FSH and LH) 1c nuclear expression of SF-1; NF-corticotroph tumor 2a hematoxylin eosin staining 2b sparse ACTH expression 2c nuclear expression of T-Pit; NF-lactotroph tumor 3a hematoxylin eosin staining 3b sparse expression of prolactin 3c nuclear expression of Pit-1 (Magnification x400)