| Literature DB >> 32664899 |
Sun Ah Shin1, Hee Young Na2, Ji Young Choe3, Seung-No Hong4, Ho Lee5, Sunwon Park6, Ji Eun Kim7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Necrotizing sialometaplasia (NSM) is an extremely rare benign lesion with an uncertain pathogenesis. The differential diagnosis of this lesion is challenging due to little familiarity with this entity and histologic similarity with carcinomas, especially mucoepidermoid carcinoma (MEC). The purpose of this study is to raise awareness about NSM, which is often overlooked or misdiagnosed as malignancy in a small biopsy.Entities:
Keywords: Differential diagnosis; Minor salivary glands; Necrotizing sialometaplasia
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32664899 PMCID: PMC7359558 DOI: 10.1186/s12903-020-01189-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Oral Health ISSN: 1472-6831 Impact factor: 2.757
Clinical summary of 4 cases of necrotizing sialometaplasia (NSM)
| Case 1a | Case 2 | Case 3 | Case 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Symptoms | Pain, discomfort | Mass sensation | Absent | Fever |
| Location | Hard palate | Hard palate | Hard palate | Hard palate |
| Predidsposingfactors | Orthodentic denture | Absent | Absent | Surgery (2WA) |
| Smoking | Denied | Denied | Denied | Denied |
| Radiology | T2 high intensity mass in MRI | 1.7 cm low density mass (CT) | Not done | Sphenoid sinus defect, no mass |
| Clinical impression | Malignancy | Odontogenic abscess | Benign lesion | Inflammation |
| Operation | Wide resection | Resection | Biopsy | Biopsy |
| Pathology | NSM | NSM | NSM | NSM with dysplasia |
| Follow-up | NED (36 mos) | NED (18mos) | NED (50 mos) | NED (14 mos) |
WA weeks ago, NED no evidence of disease, mos months
a diagnosed with mucoepidermoid carcinoma in a punch biopsy
Fig. 1Clinicoradiologic findings of necrotizing sialometaplasia. In case 1, a bulging mass (a) in the left hard palate showing well defined high signal intentisity in T2 weighted coronal MRI (b) and peripheral enhancement and necrosis on post contrast T1-weighted coronal image (c). Case 3 showed an ulcerative mass (d) subsequently healed after 3 months (e). Case 2 also presented with a well demarcated peripheral enhancing mass in left hard palate by post contrast axial CT (f). Case 4 showed right sphenoid sinus wall defect without delineable mass in the nasal cavity or the palate (g). Two months after surgery, case 4 patient’s CT scan showed the same right sphenoid sinus wall defect (h)
Fig. 2Representative microscopic features of necrotizing sialometaplasia in case 1. Extensive necrosis (a, × 40) with intact lobular architecture and squamous metaplasia (b, × 100). Metaplastic squamous cells without dysplasia are found in the inflammatory background (c, × 200). However, haphazardly arranged squamous cells and mucous glands causes confusion with mucoepidermoid carcinoma (d, × 100). (Hematoxylin Eosin)
Fig. 3Necrotizing sialometaplasia associated with high grade dysplasia in case 4 (a, × 40). Marked nuclear plemorphism is evident in squamoid cells (b, × 200). These cells showed immunoreactivity to P53 (c) and high Ki-67 (d)
Fig. 4Histologic features of a case of mucoepidermoid carcinoma (MEC). Mixed infiltration of glandular cells and epidermoid cells are characteristic of MEC (a, × 40; b, × 100). However, areas mimicking necrotizing sialometaplasia are present at the periphery (c, × 40; d, × 100)