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Cytologically Yours: Unknowns: 201401: Case 3
Revision as of 18:34, 16 January 2014 by
Seung Park
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Cytology
Resident Questions
Diagnosis?
Chronic pancreatits
Occurs in the 4th and 5th decades
Clinically presents as chronic recurrent abdominal pain
Triad steatorrhea, diabetes mellitus, and weight loss
Can present as a solid mass in the head of the pancreas
Radiologically can appear as an ill defined lobulated mass and the periphery of the lesion can look irregular
Strictures of the biliary or pancreatic ducts occurs as well as calcification
What are some of the cytologic features that lead you to the diagnosis?
Variable cellularity depending on the fibrosis in the specimen, however usually low cellularity
Smears are polymorphous (ductal cells, acinar cells, macrophages, inflammatory cells, fibrosis, debris, calcification, fat necrosis)
Hyperplastic and atypical ductal cells can be present, and can make it difficult to distinguish from adenocarcinoma.
Although markedly atypical cells may be present there will not be many and there will be no single atypical cells
Reactive cells will not have anisonucleosis and will not have nuclear irregularity
Ductal cells out number acinar cells (acinar atrophy)
Differential diagnosis?
Adenocarcinoma
Occurs later (6th and 7th decades)
Irregular nuclear contours, macronuclei, anisonucleosis
Positive staining for p53 and CDx-2
Negative staining for SMAD4
The presence of mitotic figures does not support the diagnosis of carcinoma. Mitotic figures can be seen in chronic pancreatitis.
Pancreatic cancer is often surrounded by a zone of pancreatitis, therefore pancreatits does not exclude malignancy nor does inflammation