"Atypical endosalpingiosis" (AE) is a diagnostic term used variably among pathologists to denote peritoneal lesions exhibiting architectural changes and/or cytologic atypia intermediate between endosalpingiosis and primary peritoneal serous borderline tumor (SBT). AE is a contentious entity and is not recognized in the current World Health Organisation Classification. We report a series of 10 cases classified as AE, in attempt to further characterize this lesion. The patients ranged in age from 24 to 72 yr (mean, 39.7 yr) and the commonest presenting complaint was abdominal pain. Operative findings usually comprised small peritoneal nodules and/or fibrous adhesions, predominantly involving the pelvis. The lesions were either mesothelial or submesothelial in location and typically exhibited mixed tubular and papillary architecture, sometimes with minor components of solid, cribriform or single cell growth. Epithelial multilayering was present in all cases but usually involved <25% of the lesion. There was mild nuclear atypia and mitoses were infrequent or absent. No infiltrative growth was seen. The stroma was usually inflamed and psammoma bodies were consistently present. Features which prompt a diagnosis of AE rather than endosalpingiosis include architectural alterations, usually in the form of papillae, epithelial multilayering, and mild nuclear atypia. While the extent of these findings is often less than occurs in primary peritoneal SBT or in extraovarian implants in association with an ovarian SBT, robust histologic criteria for distinction of AE from SBT do not exist. Despite this, the term AE may be of use when dealing with atypical peritoneal proliferations resembling SBT but which are limited in extent or fall just short of criteria for an unequivocal diagnosis of primary peritoneal SBT. In our series, lesions diagnosed as AE did not result in adverse clinical outcome (follow-up in 8 patients from 4 to 84 mo). Further study is required to determine whether a diagnostically reproducible and clinically relevant intermediate lesion exists between endosalpingiosis and SBT.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PGP.0000000000000600 | DOI Listing |
Int J Gynecol Pathol
May 2020
Department of Pathology, Box Hill Hospital, Eastern Health, Melbourne, Vic., Australia (K.L.T.) Department of Anatomical Pathology, Pathology New South Wales, John Hunter Hospital, Hunter New England, NSW (L.F., J.S.), Australia Department of Pathology, Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, Belfast, UK (W.G.M.).
"Atypical endosalpingiosis" (AE) is a diagnostic term used variably among pathologists to denote peritoneal lesions exhibiting architectural changes and/or cytologic atypia intermediate between endosalpingiosis and primary peritoneal serous borderline tumor (SBT). AE is a contentious entity and is not recognized in the current World Health Organisation Classification. We report a series of 10 cases classified as AE, in attempt to further characterize this lesion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBreast J
February 2012
Departments of Pathology and Surgery, University of Texas, Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, Texas, USA.
Chirurgia (Bucur)
September 2005
Departamentul de Morfopatologie, U.M.F, Târgu Mureş.
The involvement of extra-abdominal sites by serous ovarian tumours of low malignant potential is extremely rare. In this paper we present the case of a 33 years old woman, diagnosed with atypical endosalpingiosis in the axillary lymph nodes before the diagnosis of a bilaterally ovarian serous tumour of low malignant potential. The occurrence of axillary lymph nodes involvement associated with serous tumours of the ovary could be explained by the presence of circulating serous cells that remained dormant for a period of time or by the development of an independent primary tumour from glandular inclusions in axillary lymph nodes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGeburtshilfe Frauenheilkd
October 1996
Institut für Pathologie Stadtkrankenhaus Worms.
The 68-year old patient with clinical signs of peritonitis was laparotomized, and a cystic, ruptured structure thought to be an endometriotic cyst was found intraoperatively in the fundus uteri. Histomorphological investigation, however, revealed a proliferating serous papillary cyst-adenoma (borderline tumour) of the myometrium with surrounding, partially atypical endosalpingiosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Chir
June 1995
Clinique chirurgicale II, HRG Laënnec, CHU, Nantes.
Intestinal endosalpingiosis (ES) involving colon or small bowel is a rare, misleading disease. Two different aspects must be distinguished:--serosal involvement, more or less disseminated: this form is asymptomatic or associated with ascites leading to the diagnosis of peritoneal pseudo-carcinomatosis; in this form of typical or atypical endosalpingiosis of florid type, no malignancy is found on histology;--parietal involvement, leading to stenosis or intestinal perforation with enterocutaneous fistula: this malignant form of endosalpingiosis is similar to primary papillary peritoneal carcinoma or stage III ovarian carcinoma. These two forms of ES are studied on 2 cases illustrating the overlap between typical benign ES, proliferating ES and malignant ES.
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