Pancreas and adrenal pathology Flashcards

1
Q

Pancreatic endocrine neoplasm

A
  • 2% of pancreatic tumors
  • Occur anywhere in pancreas, sometimes peripancreatic or duodenal
  • Solitary or multiple
  • Can secrete any pancreatic hormone or non-functional
  • Gross: circumscribed, solid
  • Look like neuroendocrine carcinomas (carcinoids) elsewhere
  • –> Round nuclei
  • –> Coarse “salt and pepper” chromatin
  • Some features suggest the type of hormone produced, but no need to determine pathologically –> diagnosis based on clinical symptoms and blood levels
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2
Q

Insulinoma

A

Confined to the pancreas
- Amyloid deposition is characteristic

Clinical:

  • Episodic hypoglycemia causing confusion, stupor, loss of consciousness
  • Precipitated by fasting or exercise
  • Alleviated by food
  • Mild or asymptomatic in 80%

May also see with islet cell hyperplasia –> congenital secondary to maternal diabetes

Exclude other causes of hypoglycemia
- Abnormal insulin sensitivity, liver disease, inherited glycogenoses, ectopic insulin production (rare tumors), self-injection

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3
Q

Gastrinoma

A

Zollinger Ellison syndrome

  • islet cell tumor
  • hypersecretion of gastric acid
  • severe peptic ulcers
  • often presents with diarrhea

Tumors occur in pancreas or duodenal wall
- more than half are invasive or metastatic at presentation

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4
Q
  • Glucagonoma
  • Somatostatinoma
  • VIPomas
A

Glucagonoma

  • mild DB mellitus
  • skin rash
  • anemia

Somatostatinoma

  • DB mellitus (inhibits insulin)
  • cholelithiasis
  • steatorrhea
  • hypochlorhydria

VIPomas

  • watery diarrhea
  • hypokalemia
  • achlorhydria
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5
Q

Pancreatic endocrine tumors - clinical

A
  • behavior may be benign or malignant, but difficult to predict based on pathologic features
  • features diagnostic for malignancy –> mets, vascular invasion, local infiltration
  • insulinomas = 90% benign
  • all others = 60-90% malignant
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6
Q

Adrenal cortical hyperplasia

A
  • Always bilateral
  • May be diffuse or nodular
  • Usually secondary to external stimulus (e.g. pituitary adenoma) –> especially if diffuse
  • May produce one or multiple hormones
  • Microscopic: Hyperplasia of fasciculata and reticularis zones
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7
Q

Adrenal cortical adenoma

A
  • Most clinically silent, discovered incidentally
  • May produce glucocorticoids or aldosterone, or rarely androgens
  • Well-circumscribed, yellow to brown, usually Foamy cells are lipid-rich
  • –> Eosinophilic are lipid-poor
  • Mitoses are rare
  • Cortisol-secreting adenomas and (surprisingly) aldosterone-secreting adenomas both look like zona fasciculata
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8
Q

Adrenal cortical neoplasms

A

Spirinolactone bodies –> laminated eosinophilic cytoplasmic inclusions seen in aldo-secreting adenomas
- due to spironolactone treatment for htn

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9
Q

Adrenal cortical carcinoma

A

Clinical

  • Occur at any age, even children
  • More commonly functional than adenomas
  • Virilization common

Gross:

  • Larger than adenoma (usually >200 g and >20 cm)
  • Unencapsulated, infiltrative, often obliterates rest of adrenal
  • Necrosis, hemorrhage, cystic changes common

Histology

  • range from bland to anaplastic nuclear features
  • mitoses common

Prognosis

  • often invades adrenal vein, IVC and lymphatics
  • distant mets common –> regional lymph nodes, lungs, other organs
  • median survival ~2 years
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10
Q

Adrenal adenoma vs. carcinoma

A

Gross:
- Large size, hemorrhage, necrosis favor malignant

Microscopic:

  • Atypia
  • Mitotic activity
  • Atypical mitoses
  • Absence of clear cells
  • Diffuse archtitecture
  • Necrosis
  • Capsular invasion
  • Vascular invasion
  • 4 usually malignant
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11
Q

Myelolipoma

A
  • Benign tumor composed of fat and hematopoietic elements
  • looks like normal bone marrow
  • may also see this feature within adenomas
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12
Q

Pheo - clinical

A

Clinical

  • Paroxysmal hypertension
  • Tachycardia, palpitations, headache, sweating, tremor, and sense of apprehesion
  • Confirm diagnosis by measuring urine catecholamines : VMA and metanephrines

Associated with several syndromes: MEN-2, NF1, VHL

Rule of 10%:
10% bilateral (higher if familial)
10% extra-adrenal
10% malignant
10% asymptomatic (no hypertension)
10% familial (this one is wrong, actually more like 25%)
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13
Q

Pheo - gross and histologic

- malignancy

A

Gross

  • variable size
  • arise in medulla
  • yellow-tan
  • hemorrhage, necrosis and cysts common

Histology:

  • polygonal to spindles cells arranged in nests = zellballen
  • surrounded by small spindles = “sustentacular cells”
  • cytoplasm is granular
  • nuclei round with coarse salt and pepper chromatic
  • tumor cells stain for neuroendocrine markers = synaptophysin + chromogranin
  • sustentacular cells stain for S-100

Malignancy

  • cannot be predicted by histologic features
  • even local and vascular invasion not reliable
  • only diagnosed as malignant if mets
  • mets are to lymph nodes, liver, lung and bone
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14
Q

Paragangliomas

A
  • same as pheo, but arise outside adrenal

- most common in neck (carotid body) and para-aortic (ganglia of sympathetic nervous system

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15
Q

Neuroblastoma

A
  • Tumor of young children
  • 80% >4 years
  • Rarely see in adults

Presentation:

  • Abdomninal mass
  • Watery diarrhea – elaborate VIP
  • Arise in adrenal, sometimes paraganglia

Gross: large, soft, gray; hemorrhage, necrosis common
- Solitary; <10% multifocal

Microscopic = small blue cell tumor
- homer wright rosettes seen in 25%

Prognosis

  • overall 3 year survival = 30%
  • recurrences within 2 years
  • local extension to kidney and spinal cord; distant mets to liver, bone and lymph nodes
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16
Q

Ganglioneuroma

A
  • Benign tumor
  • Mostly adults
  • Mostly paraganglia
  • Gross: encapsulated, homogeneous, tan-white, firm
  • Microscopic: Differentiated ganglion cells and spindled (Schwann-like) cells
  • If any component of neuroblastoma, even minute = ganglioneuroblastoma
17
Q

Ganglioneuroblastoma

A
  • mainly in kids
  • mainly in paraganglia
  • microscopically intermediate between neuroblastoma and ganglioneuroma –> mix of both or features in between
  • prognosis also intermediate
18
Q

Secondary malignancy

A
  • mets to adrenals relatively common - much more common than primary adrenal cortical carcinoma
  • lung and breast most common sites of origin
19
Q

MEN syndromes

A

Group of inherited disorders that cause neoplasia or hyperplasia in several endocrine organs
Occur at younger age than sporadic
Frequently multifocal within an organ
More aggressive than sporadic

20
Q

MEN1

A

Wermer Syndrome

Three Ps:

  • Parathyroid (80-95%) hyperplasia or adenoma – initial presentation in most
  • Pancreas – endocrine tumors; usually aggressive and leading cause of death due to MEN-1
  • Pituitary adenomas – most commonly prolactinoma

Also see duodenal gastrinomas, carcinoid tumors, thyroid adenomas, adrenal cortical adenomas, and lipomas more than normal

Prevalence 2 per 100,000

Mutation in MEN1 tumor supressor gene, abnormal menin protein

21
Q

MEN2

A

Three distinct categories
Shared tumors
Medullary thyroid carcinoma
Pheochromocytoma (MEN-2A and 2B)
Think “medullary”
All due to mutations in RET proto-oncogene
Important to screen family members because medullary thyroid carcinoma is very aggressive; patients should have early prophylactic thyroidectomy

22
Q

MEN2A

A

Sipple Syndrome

Tumors:

  • Medullary thyroid carcinoma (100%), multifocal, with C-cell hyperplasia
  • Pheochromocytomas (40-50%), often bilateral, and increased extra-adrenal paragangliomas
  • Parathyroid hyperplasia (10-20%)

Mutation in RET proto-oncogene activates the tyrosine kinase it encodes

Familial medullary thyroid carcinoma –> considered a variant of MEN 2A, but only see medullary thyroid carcinomas

23
Q

MEN2B

A

Tumors

  • medullary thyroid carcinoma
  • pheo
  • mucosal neuromas
  • marfanoid habitus

Different mutation in RET gene