1 / 15

TTF-1 POSITIVE THYROID-LIKE PAPILLARY WILMS’ TUMOR.

TTF-1 POSITIVE THYROID-LIKE PAPILLARY WILMS’ TUMOR. M. Bisceglia (1), G. Lastilla (2), N. Santoro (3), F. De Leonardis (3), and C. Galliani (4).

ward
Download Presentation

TTF-1 POSITIVE THYROID-LIKE PAPILLARY WILMS’ TUMOR.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TTF-1 POSITIVE THYROID-LIKE PAPILLARY WILMS’ TUMOR. M. Bisceglia (1), G. Lastilla (2), N. Santoro (3), F. De Leonardis (3), and C. Galliani (4). Department of Pathology, IRCCS-Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza Hospital, San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy (1); Department of Pathology, Polyclinic Hospital, Bari, Italy (2); Department of Pediatric Medicine, Polyclinic Hospital, Bari, Italy (3); Department of Pathology, Cook Children’s Medical Center, Fort Worth, Texas, USA (4).

  2. Introduction • We reported elsewhere (1-2) on the results of a general study of TTF-1 expression in Wilms’ tumor (WT) and some congeners. • Eight of 48 WTs so studied proved to be positive for TTF-1. One of these eight positive cases (case 16 of the series (2) was particularly intriguing to us both clinicopathologically and immuno- histochemically.

  3. Case Report and Design A 2 year, eight month-old male underwent radical left nephrectomy at the Polyclinic Hospital, Bari, Italy. • The 200 g, 10.5 x 6 x 5 cm nephrectomy specimen contained a 6 cm in diameter, demarcated tumor arising from the lower pole. • The tumor invaded the capsule, pyelocalyceal system and renal sinus. • Bulky metastatic disease affected 3 hilar and 2 aorto-caval lymph nodes.

  4. Histopathologically, the lower pole mass and the bulky lymphnode metastatic deposits were predominantly epithelial nephroblastoma with florid papillary features and many psammoma bodies. • The epithelial component exhibited a striking thyroid-like appearance, including tiling of tumor cells, variable nuclear clearing, nuclear grooves in the primary, and rare nuclear pseudoinclusions in the metastasis. • Foci of conventional triphasic WT, and perilobar nephrogenic rests, interdigitating with adjacent parenchyma, were also present in the primary.

  5. Primary tumor

  6. Lymph node metastasis

  7. Sections of the primary WT and a lymph node metastasis showing a predominantly epithelial pattern of proliferations (metastasis was exclusively epithelial) were selected for further study, particularly to assess the expression of WT1 and TTF-1, in conjunction with other immunohistochemical markers.

  8. Results • The primary WT was positive for both WT1 and TTF-1 (the former only focal in blastema and early epithellial components of triphasic foci), while the metastasis was WT1 negative and TTF-1 positive. • Both the primary and the metastasis showed diffuse expression of CK/34betaE12 and CK19, focal S-100 protein cytoplasmic positivity, CD10 luminal cell surface positivity, and focal cytoplasmic expression of thyroglobulin, an immunoprofile mostly consistent with thyroid differentiation (3a). • CD56, a consistently positive marker in WT, was negative in both the primary and the metastasis.

  9. TTF-1 TTF-1 Primary tumor WT1 Thyroglobulin

  10. TTF-1 WT1 Lymph node metastasis CK19 CD10

  11. WT1 Primary tumor (nephrogenic rests) WT1

  12. Morphologically there were areas of this tumor which were even evocative of a "translocation" renal cell carcinoma of Xp11.2 type. However, the location of the primary, its essentially triphasic nature, the presence of nephrogenic rests and the age of the patient were all consistent with a primary WT. A papillary pattern and concentric calcospherites are not uncommon in WT and there was no evidence of a co-existing thyroid carcinoma (also, papillary thyroid carcinoma in children is a typically indolent disease).

  13. Conclusion. Among the notoriously heterogeneous morphologic and immunohistochemical spectrum of nephroblastomas (3b), we identified a thyroid-like, strongly TTF-1 positive tumor with a florid papillary pattern and psammoma bodies. This peculiar morphology in association with immunopositivity for TTF1 could easily lead to erroneous interpretation. Clinicopathological correlation is essential to avoid the potential for confusion.

  14. Follow-up • The patient received chemotherapy according to SIOP standard protocol for stage III nephroblastoma. • The patient is alive 21 months after nephrectomy

  15. References • Bisceglia M, Ragazzi M, Galliani C., Lastilla G, and Rosai J. TTF-1 expression in nephroblastoma: analysis of a series. Atti Congresso Nazionale SIAPEC-IAP, Bari, September 25-27, 2008. • Bisceglia M, Ragazzi M, Galliani C, Lastilla G, Rosai J. TTF-1 expression in nephroblastoma. Am J Surg Pathol 2008, in press. • Rosai J. Rosai and Ackerman’s Surgical Pathology. 9th edition, Vol 1, Mosby: New York, 2004; 532-542 (a); 1240-1245 (b).

More Related