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pancreatic ductal anomalies

Friday 30 September 2016

Duct Lesions of the Pancreas

Normal ductal and ductular epithelium

The normal ductal and ductular epithelium is a cuboidal to low-columnar epithelium with amphophilic cytoplasm. Mucinous cytoplasm, nuclear crowding and atypia are not seen.

Types

 squamous metaplasia (transitional metaplasia)

  • a process in which the normal cuboidal ductal epithelium is replaced by mature squamous or transitional epithelium without atypia.

 PanIN-1A: (Pancreatic Intraepithelial Neoplasia 1-A)

  • These are flat epithelial lesions composed of tall columnar cells with basally located nuclei and abundant supranuclear mucin.
  • The nuclei are small and round to oval in shape.
  • When oval the nuclei are oriented perpendicular to the basement membrane.
  • It is recognized that there is considerable histologic overlap between non-neoplastic flat hyperplastic lesions and flat neoplastic lesions without atypia.
  • Therefore, some may choose to designate these lesions with the modifier lesion ("PanIN/[L]-1A") to reflect the fact that the neoplastic nature of many cases of PanIn-1A has not been established.

 PanIN-1B: (Pancreatic Intraepithelial Neoplasia 1-B)

  • These epithelial lesions have a papillary, micropapillary or basally pseudostratified architecture, but are otherwise identical to PanIN-1A.

 PanIN-2: (Pancreatic Intraepithelial Neoplasia 2)

  • Architecturally these mucinous epithelial lesions may be flat or papillary.
  • Cytologically, by definition, these lesions must have some nuclear abnormalities.
  • These abnormalities may include some loss of polarity, nuclear crowding, enlarged nuclei, pseudo-stratification and hyperchromatism.
  • These nuclear abnormalities fall short of those seen in PanIN-3.
  • Mitoses are rare, but when present are non-luminal (not apical) and not atypical.
  • True cribriforming luminal necrosis and marked cytologic abnormalities are generally not seen, and when present should suggest the diagnosis of PanIN-3.

 PanIN-3: (Pancreatic Intraepithelial Neoplasia 3)

  • Architecturally, these lesions are usually papillary or micropapillary, however, they may rarely be flat.
  • True cribriforming, budding off of small clusters of epithelial cells into the lumen and luminal necroses should all suggest the diagnosis of PanIN-3.
  • Cytologically, these lesions are characterized by a loss of nuclear polarity, dystrophic goblet cells (goblet cells with nuclei oriented towards the lumen and mucinous cytoplasm oriented toward the basement membrane), mitoses which may occasionally be abnormal, nuclear irregularities and prominent (macro) nucleoli.

 intraductal tumors of the pancreas

Links

 http://pathology.jhu.edu/pancreas/professionals/DuctLesions.php