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Characteristics of Metastatic and Nonmetastatic Pulmonary Sclerosing Pneumocytomas: A Clinicopathological Study of 68 Cases and 15 Reported Metastatic Cases. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined 68 cases of pulmonary sclerosing pneumocytoma (PSP), revealing a low rate of metastasis (1.47%), predominantly affecting females with a mean age of 1.75 cm tumor size.
  • Most tumors exhibited multiple patterns (papillary, sclerotic, solid, hemorrhagic), with consistent expression of specific markers (100% for thyroid transcription factor 1 and epithelial membrane antigen).
  • No BRAF V600E mutations were found in PSP cases; however, AKT1 p.E17K mutations were identified in a case with lymph node metastasis, suggesting that while most PSP tumors are benign, some may show malignant behavior.

Article Abstract

To characterize the clinicopathologic features of pulmonary sclerosing pneumocytoma (PSP) and compare these features between the tumors with and without metastasis, 68 cases of PSP (1/68 [1.47%] with metastasis) diagnosed from 2009-2022 in our hospital and 15 previously reported metastasizing cases were studied. There were 54 female patients and 14 male patients, with age ranging from 17 to 72 years and tumor size ranging from 0.1 to 5.5 cm (mean, 1.75 cm). In all, 85.4% of the cases presented with ≥2 patterns, including papillary, sclerotic, solid, and hemorrhagic. Thyroid transcription factor 1, epithelial membrane antigen, CKpan, and CK7 were expressed in surface cells in 100% of the cases and napsin A was expressed in 90% of the cases. Stromal cell expression of these markers occurred in 100%, 93.9%, 13.5%, 13.8%, and 0% of the cases, respectively. Of the 16 PSP cases with metastasis, 8 were female patients and 7 were male patients, with age ranging from 14 to 73 years. The tumor size ranged from 2.5 to 12 cm (mean, 4.85 cm). Forty-five of the cases were negative for BRAF V600E immunostaining and 6 were focally weak positive, in which fluorescent PCR tests showed no detectable mutations. There were significant differences in gender, age, and tumor size between PSP cases with and without metastasis. No BRAF V600E mutation was found in patients with PSP. AKT1 p.E17K mutations were detected in both the primary lung tumor and the lymph node metastatic tumor of our PSP case with lymph node metastasis. In conclusion, PSP is an uncommon pulmonary neoplasm with significant female predilection and has distinct morphologic and immunohistochemical characteristics. The BRAFV600E mutation was not detectable in patients with PSP and thus may not involve in its tumorigenesis. Most PSP tumors are benign, with a minority exhibiting potential for metastasis and malignant behavior.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.labinv.2023.100135DOI Listing

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