| Literature DB >> 29899989 |
Xin Guo1, Jiro Watanabe2, Sanae Ariyasu2, Yasuyuki Sasaguri2,3, Nozomu Kurose1, Kei Fukushima4, Sohsuke Yamada1,2.
Abstract
An 80-year-old male presented with a history of a hard right parotid mass that had gradually increased in size, with subsequent facial paralysis. A fine-needle aspiration biopsy was performed. The cytologic specimens contained a substantial number of sheet-like clusters or small groups of a mixture of plasmacytoid, oval to spindled, or large epithelioid cells having hyperchromatic pleomorphic nuclei, abundant cytoplasm with occasional inclusion body-like materials, and prominent nucleoli, in a relatively clear background. We first interpreted it as a carcinoma, suggestive of myoepithelial differentiation. Radical parotidectomy was performed, and a gross examination of the neoplasm revealed a non-capsulated and ill-defined tumor lesion, with a grayish or yellowish cut surface, associated with fat invasion. On a microscopic examination, the tumor was predominantly composed of the solid proliferation of atypical cells including a mixture of oval to spindled, plasmacytoid, or epithelioid cells, often arranged in a trabecular and reticular growth pattern with patchy eosinophilic hyalinized stroma. Immunohistochemistry showed that the carcinoma cells were specifically positive for p63, cytokeratins, and vimentin. Finally, electron microscopy demonstrated that their phenotype was consistent with a myoepithelial origin containing many bundles of variably thin actin filaments. Therefore, we finally made a diagnosis of myoepithelial carcinoma, defined as the malignant counterpart of benign myoepithelioma. We should be aware that owing to its characteristic cytological features, cytopathologists may be able to make a correct diagnosis of myoepithelial carcinoma, based on multiple and adequate samplings.Entities:
Keywords: Myoepithelial carcinoma; cytopathology; myoepithelioma; parotid gland
Year: 2018 PMID: 29899989 PMCID: PMC5990880 DOI: 10.1177/2050313X18780842
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Med Case Rep ISSN: 2050-313X
Figure 1.The findings of neck CT and 18F-FDG PET/CT at surgery, FNA cytomorphologic, and gross examinations of the MC specimens. (a) Neck CT (left) shows an enhanced and relatively well-demarcated nodule with a central low-density area, measuring approximately 22 mm × 18 mm in diameter, arising from the right parotid gland (arrowhead). An axial maximum intensity projection image on coregistered 18F-FDG PET/CT (right) shows an overtly hypermetabolic area in the right parotid gland, corresponding to the neck CT finding. (b) The FNA cytology specimen (Papanicolaou staining) contains a substantial number of small groups or single cells of a mixture of plasmacytoid (inset), oval to spindled, or large epithelioid cells having hyperchromatic pleomorphic nuclei, abundant cytoplasm with occasional inclusion body-like materials, and prominent nucleoli, in a relatively clear background. Original magnification: ×400. (c) Furthermore, the FNA cytology (Papanicolaou staining) shows a substantial number of sheet-like clusters of atypical myoepithelial-like cells. Original magnification: ×400. (d) A gross examination from the surgical specimen shows a non-capsulated and ill-defined tumor lesion with a grayish to yellowish cut surface, measuring 18 mm × 16 mm in diameter, partly associated with surrounding fat invasion (arrows). Bar = 1 cm.
Figure 2.Microscopic and ultrastructural examinations of the parotid gland MC. (a) Microscopically, this tumor is predominantly composed of the solid proliferation of atypical cells, involving the surrounding fat. Original magnification: ×40. (b) Those proliferating tumor nests contain a mixture of oval to spindled, plasmacytoid, or epithelioid cells, often arranged in a trabecular and reticular growth pattern with a patchy eosinophilic hyalinized stroma. On a high-power view, the neoplastic cells have medium-sized, hyperchromatic and enlarged nuclei, often conspicuous nucleoli, and abundant clear to eosinophilic cytoplasm (inset). Original magnification: ×200 (inset, ×400). (c) Immunohistochemical findings show that those carcinoma cells are specifically and diffusely positive for p63 (left) and cytokeratins, including AE1/AE3 (right). Original magnification: ×100. (d) Electron microscopy shows that the phenotype of the carcinoma cells exhibits myoepithelial differentiation, containing many bundles of variably thin actin filaments. Bar = 1 µm. N: nucleus.