Premium
Pancreatoblastoma: Cytologic and histologic analysis of 12 adult cases reveals helpful criteria in their diagnosis and distinction from common mimics
Author(s) -
Reid Michelle D.,
Bhattarai Shristi,
Graham Rondell P.,
Pehlivanoglu Burcin,
Sigel Carlie S.,
Shi Jiaqi,
Saqi Anjali,
Shirazi Maryam,
Xue Yue,
Basturk Olca,
Adsay Volkan
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cancer cytopathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.29
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1934-6638
pISSN - 1934-662X
DOI - 10.1002/cncy.22187
Subject(s) - medicine , pathology , atypia , malignancy , pleomorphism (cytology) , cytopathology , carcinoma , pancreas , neuroendocrine differentiation , nuclear atypia , neuroendocrine tumors , cytology , cancer , immunohistochemistry , prostate cancer
Background Pancreatoblastoma (PBL) is a rare malignant pancreatic tumor seen predominantly in childhood, and its cytologic diagnosis remains challenging. Methods Twelve fine‐needle‐aspirations from 11 adults were analyzed. Results In total, 6 men and 5 women (median age, 45 years; age range, 32‐60 years) had tumors measuring a median 5.6 cm (range, 2.5‐12 cm) located in the pancreatic head (n = 7) or tail (n = 4), including 3 with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP)/FAP‐related syndromes and 4 with metastasis at diagnosis. The median follow‐up was 39.8 months (range, 0.8‐348 months), and 5 patients died of disease. The original cytology diagnoses were: PBL (n = 2), neuroendocrine neoplasm (n = 2), poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma (n = 2), well differentiated neuroendocrine tumor (n = 1), poorly differentiated carcinoma (n = 2), “positive for malignancy” (n = 1), acinar cell carcinoma (n = 1), and epithelioid neoplasm with endocrine and acinar differentiation versus PBL (n = 1). Universal cytopathologic findings included hypercellularity; 3‐dimensional clusters; and single, monotonous, blast‐like cells that were from 1.5 to 2.0 times the size of red blood cells with high nuclear‐to‐cytoplasmic ratio, fine chromatin, small, distinct nucleoli, and a resemblance to well differentiated neuroendocrine tumor and poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma. Branching pseudopapillae (n = 7) and grooved nuclei (n = 3) raised the differential diagnosis of solid‐pseudopapillary neoplasm, but with more atypia. Uncommon features included pleomorphism (n = 4) and numerous mitoses (n = 1). Squamoid morules were seen on smears (n = 5) or cell blocks (n = 6) in 70% of patients and were characterized by epithelioid cells with elongated, streaming nuclei, fine chromatin, absent nucleoli, and positive nuclear β‐catenin (n = 6 of 8). The median Ki‐67 index was 21% (range, 2%‐70%), and neuroendocrine marker expression was common (100%), but acinar markers were variable (63%). Conclusions A combination of cytologic findings in PBL, including a predominant population of primitive blast‐like cells, subtle squamoid morules, frequent neuroendocrine and variable acinar phenotype, should facilitate accurate cytologic diagnosis and distinction from common mimics.