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Clinical and histopathological features of pulmonary sclerosing pneumocytoma with dense spindle stromal cells and lymph node metastasis
Author(s) -
Gao Qiqi,
Zhou Jie,
Zheng Yulong,
Cui Jinlong,
Teng Xiaodong
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
histopathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.626
H-Index - 124
eISSN - 1365-2559
pISSN - 0309-0167
DOI - 10.1111/his.14159
Subject(s) - pathology , stromal cell , immunohistochemistry , metastasis , medicine , vimentin , lymph node , lymph , cancer
Aims To determine the clinicopathological features of pulmonary sclerosing pneumocytoma (PSP) with spindle cells and in cases with positive detection of PSP cells in the lymph nodes. Methods and results This article report the clinical, histological and immunohistochemical features of PSP with dense spindle stromal cells in five patients (including one case with lymph node metastasis) and PSP accompanied by positive nodes in two patients out of 239 cases diagnosed at our institution between 2007 and 2019. The literature on PSP was also reviewed in detail. Six patients were female, and one (with a positive node) was male; their average age was 53 years. Thoracic imaging revealed solid tumours with clear borders and a uniform texture in six patients, but one patient had a lobulated tumour with uneven densities. All tumours were unifocal, and they had an average size of 31 mm. Tumours from five cases were mainly composed of solid regions of diffuse spindle cells rather than polygonal cells. Immunohistochemical staining demonstrated that thyroid transcription factor‐1, vimentin, epithelial membrane antigen (weak) and oestrogen receptor (partial) were expressed in spindle cells. The average follow‐up time was 31 months. Two of the 234 PSP cases for which adequate data were available had positive nodes (metastasis rate: 0.8%), and one of the five patients with PSP with spindle cells showed lymph node metastasis (metastasis rate: 20%). In addition, stromal cells were found to be predominant at metastatic sites. Conclusions Spindle cells are present among the stromal cells of PSP, and not all of them are round cells. PSP patients with spindle cells or male patients may be more prone to metastasis than others.

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