| Literature DB >> 29922536 |
Darren Rom1, Migie Lee2, Edward Chandraratnam3, Ronald Chin1, Niranjan Sritharan2.
Abstract
Background Respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartomas (REAH) are rare, glandular proliferations of the aerodigestive tract lined by ciliated respiratory epithelium. We report nine cases of REAH and devised a histopathological guide to differentiate these lesions from its main differentials. Methods Patients with biopsy-proven REAH were included in the series. Lesions were removed endoscopically and sent for histopathological analysis. The macroscopic and microscopic features were reviewed. Results Nine patients (age 59 ± 15.5 years, 78% male) with REAH were analysed. Findings revealed glandular proliferations lined by ciliated respiratory epithelium without metaplastic changes and intervening oedematous stroma. This is in contrast to a typically thickened epithelial basement membrane with oedematous stroma seen in nasal polyps. Conclusion REAHs are benign entities that should be included in the differential diagnosis for sinonasal masses. Prompt detection by tissue biopsy is crucial to differentiate these lesions from nasal polyps and more aggressive pathologies and avoid unnecessary surgery.Entities:
Keywords: differential; hamartoma; histopathology; mass; sinonasal
Year: 2018 PMID: 29922536 PMCID: PMC6003788 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.2495
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Histological characteristics of REAH. A low powered photomicrograph showing small- to medium-sized glands separated by stroma.
REAH: Respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartoma
Figure 2High powered photomicrograph showing multi-layered ciliated epithelium with hyaline thickening of the basement membrane.
Comparison of histological characteristics of REAH, nasal polyps and inverted papillomas.
HPV: Human papillomavirus; REAH: Respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartoma.
| Histological features | REAH | Nasal polyp | Inverted papilloma |
| Site | The majority occurs in the nasal cavity. Usually affects the nasal septum, especially in the posterior area. Usually unilateral. | Rarely show septal involvement. Usually bilateral. | Most common in nasal cavity and maxillary sinus. About a third of cases originate from multiple sites. Rarely bilateral. |
| Surface epithelium | Invaginates into submucosa and direct continuity with proliferating glands can be seen. | Surface invagination absent and characteristically basement membrane is thickened. | Multiple inversions of the surface epithelium into the underlying stroma. |
| Basement membrane thickening | Absent | Present | Absent |
| Glandular proliferation | Widely spaced, small- to medium-sized, round to oval glands separated by stroma (dominant feature). Glands are usually distended with mucus. | Glandular proliferation absent. | Multiple inversions of the surface epithelium into the underlying stroma with continuous, distinct and intact basement membrane. |
| Lining epithelium of glands | Respiratory epithelium often with admixed mucin-secreting (goblet) cells. Atrophic glands lined by single layer of flattened to cuboidal-epithelium may be present. | Glandular proliferation absent. | Proliferating squamous and/or respiratory cells with numerous microcysts (infiltration of epithelium by transmigrating neutrophils). Non-keratinizing squamous or transitional epithelium (5-30 cells thick), frequently predominates and is covered with a layer of ciliated columnar cells. Occasionally spare mitoses confined to the basal layers. |
| Basement membrane of glands | Hyalinization of variably thickened, eosinophilic basement membrane enveloping proliferating glands (characteristic finding). | Thickening of basement membrane of glands absent | Distinct and intact, continuous basement membrane. |
| Stroma | Oedematous or fibrous stroma containing mixed inflammatory cell infiltrate (plasma cells, lymphocytes) | Marked stromal oedema and mixed inflammatory cell infiltrate (eosinophils, plasma cells and lymphocytes), bland-appearing stromal fibroblasts and small- to medium-sized blood vessels | Either loose or dense, and maybe inflamed. |
| Possible additional findings | Co-existence with inflammatory polyps can occur. Tissues native to sinonasal tract or nasopharynx such as adipose tissue, bone, cartilage and chondromesenchymal tissue can occur rarely. Co-existence with Schneiderian papilloma (inverted type) and solitary fibrous tumour can occur rarely. | Atypical stromal cells, granulation tissue, granuloma formation, amyloid-like stroma can occur rarely. | Premalignant and malignant features: dysplasia, carcinoma in situ, invasive carcinoma can occur rarely. Thorough sampling and evidence seeking for malignant transformation should always be performed. HPV infection can be detected in a number of cases. |