AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the relationship between WHO tumor grades, patient outcomes, and the presence of the genetic marker t(11;19) in 40 mucoepidermoid carcinoma (MEC) cases.
  • The researchers classified MECs into 'classical' and 'variant' types, finding that classical MECs were more prevalent and often linked to better prognosis indicators, such as lower grades and younger age.
  • Key findings emphasize the significance of histological diversity in MECs and suggest that both WHO grading and histological subtype have important implications for patient prognosis.

Article Abstract

Aims: To correlate World Health Organization (WHO) grade, patient's outcome and presence of t(11;19) to histological tumour variants in 40 well-characterized mucoepidermoid carcinomas (MECs).

Methods And Results: MECs were classified as 'classical' based on the presence of equal proportions of the three cell types or the dominance (≥50%) of mucous cells together with at least one other cell type, and as 'variant' if composed of ≥80% of a single non-mucous cell type. Classical MECs were more common (n=23). Variant MECs had predominant squamoid (n=9), eosinophilic (n=5) or clear cell (n=3) morphology. Twenty-seven tumours were WHO grade 1, three grade 2 and ten grade 3. The t(11;19) was detected in 82%, 35% and 0% of classical MEC, variant MEC and non-MEC, respectively. Classical MECs were associated significantly with age ≤60 years (P<0.001), grade 1 (P<0.001) and t(11;19) (P=0.003). Short overall survival was associated significantly with age >60 years (P=0.001) and Union for International Cancer Control (UICC) stage >I (P=0.031), residual tumour (P<0.001), tumour grade >1 (P=0.001) and squamoid variant (P=0.002) in Kaplan-Meier analysis.

Conclusions: The results underscore the great histological diversity of MEC, the reproducibility of the WHO grading criteria and the value of histological subtypes as an additional prognostic factor.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2559.2011.03777.xDOI Listing

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