Micronodular thymic carcinoma with lymphoid hyperplasia: relevance of immunohistochemistry with a small panel of antibodies for diagnosis—a RYTHMIC study

Vincent Thomas de Montpreville, Audrey Mansuet-Lupo, Cécile Le Naoures, Lara Chalabreysse, Anne De Muret, Véronique Hofman, Isabelle Rouquette, Nicolas Piton, Romain Dubois, Jose Carlos Benitez, Nicolas Girard, Benjamin Besse, Alexander Marx, Thierry Jo Molina

    Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

    9 Citations (Scopus)

    Résumé

    Micronodular thymic carcinoma with lymphoid hyperplasia (MNTCLH) is a rare form of thymic carcinoma. We present the experience of RYTHMIC, the French national network devoted to the treatment of thymic epithelial tumors through multidisciplinary tumor boards with a review of all tumors by pathologists for classification and staging. Six cases of MNTCLH were diagnosed during a review of 1007 thymic epithelial tumors. Histologically, epithelial cells with atypia and mitoses formed micronodules that were surrounded by an abundant lymphoid background with follicles. There was neither obvious fibro-inflammatory stroma nor necrosis. Spindle cells areas were common. Initial diagnosis was micronodular thymoma in two cases, cellular atypia being overlooked, eclipsed by the micronodular pattern. Immunohistochemistry with a panel of five antibodies showed that cytokeratins (AE1-AE3) and p63-positive epithelial cells also expressed CD5 and that there was no TdT-positive cells within the tumors. CD20 highlighted the lymphoid hyperplasia. Additionally epithelial cells also expressed CD117 and diffusely Glut 1. Twenty-seven micronodular thymomas with lymphoid stroma diagnosed during the same period did not show the CD5 and CD117 positivities seen in MNTCLH and contained TdT-positive lymphocytes. Three of the 6 patients with MNTCLH had adjuvant radiotherapy. Three patients with follow-up information were alive without recurrence at 38, 51, and 95 months. Our study shows that immunohistochemistry, such as that used in the RYTHMIC network with a small panel of antibodies, may easily help to confirm the correct diagnosis of MNTCLH, a rare and low-aggressive form of thymic carcinoma, and avoid the misdiagnosis of micronodular thymoma.

    langue originaleAnglais
    Pages (de - à)741-746
    Nombre de pages6
    journalVirchows Archiv
    Volume479
    Numéro de publication4
    Les DOIs
    étatPublié - 1 oct. 2021

    Contient cette citation