| Literature DB >> 31338576 |
Alfio Ferlito1, Kenneth O Devaney2, Antti A Mäkitie3,4,5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The tissues of the laryngeal region only rarely harbor primary cartilaginous lesions, and squamous cell carcinoma remains the most frequently encountered malignant tumor in this area.Entities:
Keywords: Histology; Metastasis; Pathology; Radiotherapy; Surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31338576 PMCID: PMC6757023 DOI: 10.1007/s00405-019-05563-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 0937-4477 Impact factor: 2.503
Key features of a laryngeal chondrometaplasia
| Relatively common (perhaps as many as 9% of symptomatic vocal cord polyps, 1.2–1.7% at autopsy) | |
| Symptomatic i.e. change in phonation (vocal cords, epiglottis, ventricle), or asymptomatic (false vocal cords) | |
| Adults (average age 52 years, symptomatic patients) | |
| Size usually less than 1 cm in diameter | |
| Elastic cartilage; small homogeneous nuclei, no mitoses | |
| Differential diagnosis—chondroma | |
| Transition zone (chondroid center, spindle periphery) | |
| Recurrences rare following excision, no metastatic potential |
Key features of a laryngeal chondroma
| Rare lesions. May be less common than laryngeal chondrosarcoma, but the true incidence is difficult to judge from older reports in which the distinction from chondrometaplasia and low-grade chondrosarcoma may sometimes have been imperfect | |
| Symptomatic lesions cause airway obstruction or a palpable mass in the neck | |
| Usually found in the vicinity of the cricoid cartilage, thyroid cartilage, epiglottis, and arytenoids | |
| May be a few cm in diameter and usually smaller than a laryngeal chondrosarcoma | |
| Hyaline cartilage, small, monomorphous nuclei without significant nuclear details, no mitoses | |
| No transition zone (in contrast to chondrometaplasia) | |
| Differential diagnosis: chondrometaplasia, low-grade chondrosarcoma (and, most rarely, laryngeal hamartomas) | |
| May recur following excision, but this is uncommon, no metastatic potential |
The differential diagnosis of chondrometaplasia and chondroma of the larynx
| Chondrometaplasia | Chondroma | |
|---|---|---|
| Symptoms | Hoarseness or asymptomaticr | Obstruction of the airway or swelling of the neck |
| Gross presentation | Small nodule < 1 cm in diameter | Multilobular tumour |
| Gross presentation | Ventricular fold and vocal cord | Cricoid and thyroid cartilages |
| Type of cartilage | Elastic | Hyaline (usually) |
The largest ( > 5 cases presented) published series of laryngeal chondrosarcoma
| Series | No. of cases | Period | Authors | Year | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| University Hospital Heidelberg, Germany | 7 | 2013–2018 | Akbaba et al. [ | 2018 | These cases were treated upfront with raster-scanned carbon ion Radiotherapy |
| Johns Hopkins, School of Medicine, Baltimore, USA | 6 | 2004–2013 | Karatayli-Ozgursoy et al. [ | 2016 | All were of cricoid origin, three out of six had a recurrence |
| Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK | 5 | 1996–2012 | Stavrakas et al. [ | 2016 | |
| Dept. of ORL, Turin, Rome, Belluno, Italy | 6 | 2006–2013 | Damiani et al. [ | 2014 | All had conservative surgical approach |
| Centro Hospitalar e Universitário de Coimbra, Portugal | 6 | 2002–2012 | Oliveira et al. [ | 2014 | One had high grade, five underwent total laryngectomy |
| Montpellier University Hospital, France | 7 | 2001–2008 | Pelliccia et al. [ | 2014 | All had low-grade cricoid chondrosarcoma |
| University of Brescia, Italy | 16 | 2001–2013 | Piazza et al. [ | 2014 | Eleven were of low grade and five of intermediate grade |
| Moffitt Cancer Institute USA | 5 | 2004–2011 | Jackson et al. [ | 2013 | Four were of low grade and one of intermediate grade |
| Tel Aviv University, Israel | 6 | 1959–2010 | Buda et al. [ | 2012 | Recurrence developed in two patients 2 and 8 years after primary treatment |
| Harvard Medical School USA | 11 | 2002–2011 | Friedman et al. [ | 2012 | b |
| Harvard Medical School, USA | 10 | 1995–2010 | Zeitels et al. [ | 2011 | Eight underwent conservation function preservation surgery |
| Croix-Rousse Hospital, France | 7 | 1996–2006 | Merrot et al. [ | 2009 | All were of low grade |
| Institut Gustave-Roussy France, and M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, USA | 15 | 1978–1997 | Casiraghi et al. [ | 2004 | One was of high grade |
| Wake Forest University, USA | 9 | 1991–2002 | Koufman et al. [ | 2004 | All were cricoid and of low grade |
| Armed Forces, Institute of Pathology, USA | 111 | 1970–1997 | Thompson and Gannon [ | 2002 | Only six were of high grade |
| Clermont-Ferrand University Medical Center, France | 5 | 1981–1990 | Saleh et al. [ | 2002 | One was of high grade One was myxoid type and presented with neck metastases |
| The Royal National Throat, Nose and Ear Hospital, UK | 12 | 1976–1999 | Rinaldo et al. [ | 2000 | All were of low grade No metastases |
| Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, USA | 240 | 1929–1999 | Dennis K. Heffner personal communication [ | 1999 | This series includes the cases of Thompson and Gannon 2002a |
| University Hospital VU, Amsterdam | 5 | 1980–1998 | Tiwari et al. [ | 1999 | One of the authors previously reported four cases of chondrosarcoma of the cricoid treated from 1985 to 1995 at the same institution. No lymph node or distant metastases |
| University of Kiel, Germany | 5 | 1975–1995 | Lippert et al. [ | 1997 | One patient died of brain metastases 3 months after surgery |
| Mayo Clinic, Minnesota, USA | 44 | 1910–1995 | Lewis et al. [ | 1997 | All were of low grade. No lymph node or distant metastasesc |
| University of Buenos Aires, Medical Center, Argentina | 6 | 1973–1990 | Sztern et al. [ | 1993 | No lymph node or distant metastases |
| Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University Medical Center, USA | 10 | –d | Wippold et al. [ | 1993 | One was of thyroid origin, all were visible in CT scan |
| Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York City, USA | 11 | 1973–1990 | Brandwein et al. [ | 1992 | Two cases were dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma and one presented with cervical lymph node metastases |
| Depts. of ORL-HNS, Universities of Brescia (1) Padua (2) and New Haven (3) | 8 | 1983–1989 (1) 1966–1989 (2) 1962–1989 (3) | Nicolai et al. [ | 1990 | One case was dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma and the patient presented with lung metastases |
| Swedish Cancer Registry | 6 | 1958–1972 | Östberg et al. [ | 1979 | No lymph node or distant metastases |
| Chevalier Jackson Clinic, USA | 10 | 1935–1970 | Al-Saleem et al. [ | 1970 | One patient presented with cervical lymph node metastasis |
| Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, USA | 8 | 1940–1970 | Huizenga and Balogh [ | 1970 | One patient presented with lung, kidney, and neck metastases |
aThompson and Gannon [22]
bThis series includes the 10 cases reported by Zeitels et al. [53] for the period 1995–2010
cThis series includes previous published series (Goethals and Dahlin [65]; Gorenstein et al. [66]; Neel and Unni [11]; Kozelsky et al. [67])
d Six cases were from the series registered during the years 1970–1991 at the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology (AFIP) and therefore, these have been partially reported by Thompson and Gannon [22] and Heffner (personal communication 1999) [23]. Four additional cases with CT examinations were obtained from the teaching archives of the Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology
Histologic subtypes of laryngeal chondrosarcomas
| Low-grade chondrosarcoma (grade 1 of 3) (slight increase in cellularity, nuclear size, and nuclear detail over chondroma; no or rare mitoses) | |
| Intermediate-grade chondosarcoma (grade 2 of 3) (distinct increase in cellularity, nuclear size, nuclear detail, and cytological atypia over chondroma, mitoses still difficult to find) | |
| High grade chondrosarcoma (grade 3 of 3) (high cellularity , easily recognized cytological atypia; mitotic figures usually readily identified; areas may be difficult to recognize as cartilaginous, owing to exceedingly high cellularity and anaplasia of tumor cells) | |
| Dedifferentiated chondrosarcoma (chondrosarcoma with additional malignant mesenchymal component) (CAMMC) (low-grade chondrosarcomatous areas juxtaposed with high-grade sarcomatous area—undifferentiated pleomorphic sarcoma (malignant fibrous histiocytoma), fibrosarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, osteosarcoma, or sarcoma not further subclassified) | |
| Chondrosarcoma with extensive myxoid change (nodules of monomorphous round to spindle cells arranged in cords, trabeculae and small clusters and set in a myxoid matrix; mitotic figures not readily identified) (note: tumors with this appearance that manifest a recipirocal t(9;22) translocation may be related to a recognized soft tissue tumor, the extraskeletal myoxid chondrosarcoma) | |
| Clear cell chondrosarcoma (the tumor contains a component of balloon-like rounded cells with a predominantly clear cytoplasm and prominent nucleoli, in addition to multinucleated giant cells and bone trabeculae; the balloon-like clear cells are glycogen positive) |
Key features of a laryngeal chondrosarcoma
| Rare lesions: true incidence difficult to judge, as distinction from chondroma has not always been based on modern criteria | |
| Usually arise in the vicinity of the cricoid cartilage (less often the thyroid cartilage, epiglottis, and body of the arytenoid) | |
| Typically large lesions: 1–6 cm in diameter (usually larger than laryngeal chondromas) | |
| Hyaline cartilage | |
| Cytological features vary from barely perceptible nuclear atypia to readily apparent anaplasia (as a function of the histological type and grade of the tumor) | |
| Differential-chondroma | |
| Recurrence may occur following excision, may metastasize (frequency related to histological type and grade |
Comparison of cartilaginous lesions of the larynx
| Chondrometaplasia | Chondroma | Chondrosarcoma | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Presentation | Asymptomatic or hoarseness | Dyspnea, hoarseness, mass | Dyspnea, hoarseness, mass, vocal cord paralysis, dysphagia |
| Common locations | Vocal cords, epiglottis | Cricoid, thyroid cartilage, epiglottis body of the arytenoid | Cricoid, thyroid cartilage, epiglottis, body of arytenoid |
| Size | Less than 1 cm | Usually 1–3 cm | Usually over 3 cm |
| Fibrocartilage | Present | Absent | Absent |
| Hyaline cartilage | Absent | Present | Present |
| Stromal myxoid change | Absent | Absent | May be present |
| Cellularity | Low | Low | Slight increase to tremendous increase |
| Cytological atypia | Absent | Absent | Minimal to pronounced |
| Mitotic figures | Absent | Absent | Rare to numerous |
| Invasive border | Absent | Absent | Present |