| Literature DB >> 31007960 |
Nelson Montalvo1, David Galarza2, Ligia Redrobán3.
Abstract
Secretory carcinoma (SC) is a recently described entity occurring in the salivary glands. Before its description, SC was frequently classified as acinic cell carcinoma (ACC) or adenocarcinoma, not otherwise specified. Its particular histopathological and immunohistochemical characteristics are reminiscent of breast secretory carcinoma. Moreover, it displays a characteristic t(12;15) (p13;q25) translocation that results in the ETV6-NTRK3 gene fusion. This translocation has not been reported in any other salivary gland carcinoma. Identification of the t(12;15) (p13;q25) translocation is the gold standard for diagnosis, although some cases that do not present this specific translocation have already been reported. In such cases, diagnosis is challenging. In addition, some diagnostic pathology laboratories lack the resources to perform the molecular analysis to diagnose SC. In this scenario, morphology and immunohistochemistry are fundamental. Therefore, we report a case emphasizing the typical morphology of SC and its immunochemical profile to establish a final diagnosis without molecular biology tests. This case aims to demonstrate the importance of recognizing the typical presentation of a rare tumor so that clinicians will be informed or reminded of it and consider this entity among the differential diagnoses, when necessary. Moreover, in low-resource settings where molecular analysis is not available, being familiar enough with the histology of this tumor and using the immunoprofile as a key tool for differential diagnosis would be of great importance in establishing the correct diagnosis. The differential diagnosis includes, above all, acinic cell carcinoma and other salivary neoplasms such as intraductal carcinoma, low-grade mucoepidermoid carcinoma, and adenocarcinoma, not otherwise specified, which is actually a rule-out diagnosis.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31007960 PMCID: PMC6441535 DOI: 10.1155/2019/5103496
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Pathol ISSN: 2090-679X
Figure 1SC of parotid gland, epithelial neoplasm with a lobular growth pattern, and solid microcystic areas (a-b) [H/E 10X and 40X]. Tubular structures showing abundant, foamy, PAS- and Alcian Blue-positive intraluminal material (c-d). The tumor cells positive for S100 and mammaglobin (e-f), but negative for DOG-1 (g).
Clinicopathological characteristics of secretory carcinoma.
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| Equal distribution or a slight male predominance (1.5:1), depending on the series |
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| Parotid glands, without lateral predominance |
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| Progressively growing painless mass |
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| A firm mass with a rubbery consistency to the touch |
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| Eosinophilic cell proliferation forming lobules separated by thin fibrous septa and showing microcystic, tubular, papillary, or solid patterns and abundant PAS- and mucicarmine-positive secretion |
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| S-100 protein, mammaglobin, and vimentin positive |
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| Characteristic t(12;15) (p13;q25) translocation with |
Key elements in the differential diagnosis of secretory carcinoma.
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| Parotid gland (75%); present in minor salivary glands, more frequently than ACC, and in the oral cavity | Parotid (90%); very rarely in minor salivary glands | Parotid, most frequently; tongue (posterior region) and minor salivary glands | Parotid (50%) and oral cavity (palate and oral mucosa); very rarely (1-2%) in the submandibular gland |
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| Slight male predominance | Female predominance | The same for both sexes | The same for both sexes |
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| Predominantly tubular, microcystic, and solid | Common: solid, follicular, and microcystic | Encapsulated and cystic, with cribriform and papillary patterns | Heterogeneous pattern: solid and cystic with hydropic degeneration and metaplastic changes |
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| Epithelial, without acinar differentiation | Acinar and basophilic | Monotonous, with ductal, cuboidal, and apocrine characteristics | Morphologically bland epidermoid, mucinous, and intermediate cells that are oncocytic, clear, or columnar/polygonal |
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| Eosinophilic, granular, or vacuolated; no zymogen granules | PAS positive zymogen granules | Eosinophilic, very infrequently with iron pigment | Abundant, clear (mucicarmine, Alcian blue, and PAS-diastase positive), eosinophilic, and foamy |
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| Round or oval | Monomorphic | Clear vesicular nuclei with the appearance of frosted glass that overlap one another | Small hyperchromatic nuclei |
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| S-100 protein and mammaglobin positive | Mammaglobin and p63 negative | S-100 protein, vimentin, and mammaglobin positive; p63- and calponin-positive myoepithelial cells | Positive p63 staining in epidermoid foci and usually S100 and mammaglobin negative |
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| t(12;15) |
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| t(11;19) |
∗ There is a type of acinic cell carcinoma whose cells contain few zymogen granules. In these cases, the differential diagnosis of SC relies mainly on molecular analysis.