Tag Archives: adenoma

Metanephric Adenoma

Metanephric Adenoma

·    young to middle aged women
·    well-circumscribed and cortical
·    small round blue cells
·    compact tubules
·    cytokeratin and vimetin positive
·    benign (no mitoses, no nucleoli)

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Tubulo-Papillary Adenoma

Tubulo-Papillary Adenoma

·    small (1-3mm)
·    tubules/ papillary
·    benign

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Tumors of the Rete Ovarii

Tumors of the Rete Ovarii

- adenoma, adenocarcinoma, cystadenoma, cystadenofibroma

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Adenoma Carcinoma Sequence

Adenoma Carcinoma Sequence

Steps and pathway to cancer development:

1. “First hit”: germline or somatic mutations to:

- APC, mismatch repair genes (MSH2)

2. “Second hit”: methylation, inactivation of normal alleles:

- APC, B-catenin, MSH2

Adenomas

3. Protooncogene mutation: k-ras

4. Homozygous loss of other tumour suppressor protein: p53

5. Carcinoma: many genes involved and altered

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Attenuated Familial Adenomatous Polyposis

Attenuated Familial Adenomatous Polyposis

AFAP (Attenuated)

Genetics:
- mutations in APC gene 5q chromosome, exon 9 (5’, 3’ ends)
- also mutations to MYH (base excision repair gene)

Gross: flat, plaque-like, less than 100, right colon

Histology

- adenomas, may have adenomatous flat epithelium

Clinical: adenocarcinoma later ~55yrs

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Gastric Adenoma

Gastric Adenoma

- intestinal or gastric

- not major precursor for adenoma

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Pituitary Adenoma

Pituitary adenoma

Pituitary adenoma pathological classification

•    Prolactin cell (lactotroph) adenoma
•    Growth hormone cell (somatotroph) adenoma
-    Densely granulated GH cell adenoma
-    Sparsely granulated GH cell adenoma with fibrous bodies
•    Thyroid stimulating-hormone cell (thyrotroph) adenoma
•    ACTH cell (corticotroph) adenoma
•    Gonadotroph cell adenoma
-    Silent gonadotroph adenomas include null cell and oncocytic adenomas
•    Mixed growth hormone-prolactin cell (mammosomatotroph) adenoma
•    Other plurihormonal adenomas
•    Hormone negative adenomas

Radiographic features of Pituitary adenoma

•    Ballooning of the pituitary fossa (becomes rounded and expanded)
•    May extend into chiasmatic cistern, cavernous sinus, or sphenoid sinus
•    Erosion of sella turcica and anterior clinoid processes
•    Compression of optic chiasm and other cranial nerves

Associated clinical syndromes with Pituitary adenoma

•    Gigantism
•    Acromegaly
•    Cushing syndrome
•    Prolactinemia
•    Hyperthyroidism
•    Diabetes insipidus
•    Hypopituitarism
•    MEN1

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Sebaceous Adenoma

Sebaceous Adenoma

Sebaceous adenoma.

Sebaceous adenoma of the skin.

Sebaceous adenoma cells.

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Familial Adenomatous Polyposis Syndrome

Familial Adenomatous Polyposis (FAP) Syndrome

Familial Adenomatous Polyposis Syndrome Inheritance pattern

- autosomal dominant inheritance

- APC gene is on chromosome 5q21
- APC gene plays a role in the WNT pathway in the degradation of the beta-catenin

- beta-catenin role is to turn on transcription factors in the nucleus that lead to cell cycle progression
-mutations in the APC leads to absence of b-catenin degradation and signal independent tranlocation into the nucleus where it turns on the cell cycl

Familial Adenomatous Polyposis Syndrome Clinical Presentation

- two types of clinical presentations:

Classic Familial Adenomatous Polyposis

- minimum of 100 colonic polyps

- polyps in ampulla of Vater – this leads to a prophylactic colectomy in siblings and first-degree relatives which are at risk

Attenuated Familial Adenomatous Polyposis

- patients tend to develop fewer polyps (average 30), and most of the polyps are located in the proximal colon

- lifetime risk of cancer development is usually around 50%

Gardner syndrome

- polyps identical to those in classic FAP
- multiple osteomas (particularly of the mandible, skull, and long bones)
- epidermal cysts
- fibromatosis – desmoid tumors
- less frequent are abnormalities of dentition, such as unerupted and supernumerary teeth
- higher frequency of duodenal and thyroid cancer

Turcot syndrome

- combination of adenomatous colonic polyposis and tumors of the CNS
2/3 have  have APC gene mutations and develop brain medulloblastomas

- 1/3 have mutations in one of the genes associated with HNPCC and develop brain glioblastomas

Gross Features of Familial Adenomatous Polyposis

-hundreds to thousands of adenomas evenly distributed through colorectum  and appendix
- adenomas range from microscopic to 1cm in diameter with larger adenomas found in the rectosigmoid
- rectum occasionally spared, especially in the attenuated FAP
- colorectal carcinomas may be multifocal

Microscopic Features of Familial Adenomatous Polyposis

- histologically identical to sporadic adenomas
- normal intervening mucosa

- adenomas evolve from single adenomatous crypts

Symptoms and Management

- patients may be asymptomatic before puberty
- initial symptoms are  rectal bleeding and diarrhea
- carcinomas start about 6 years after first symptoms
- 100%  colon cancer without intervention
- treatment is prophylactic total colectomy
- following colectomy, the most common cause of death is periampullary cancer in 20%

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Colon Cancer arising in an Adenoma

Colorectal Cancer in an Adenoma

Features of a Cancer arising in an adenoma, what to look for?

Colon cancer in lamina propria is staged as Tis and is treated by somple polypectomy during scoping.

Colon cancer arising in an colonic adenomatous polyp, which breaches the muscularis mucosa is staged T1) and can be treated with polypectomy, unless there is:
-high grade dysplasia

-lymphovascular invasion

-positive stalk margin (e.g. remaining tumor which the surgeon was unable to completely remove)

- the adenoma is large, >2cm

If any of the above, then the patient needs a hemicolectomy.

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