TY - JOUR
T1 - Micronodular thymic carcinoma with lymphoid hyperplasia
T2 - relevance of immunohistochemistry with a small panel of antibodies for diagnosis—a RYTHMIC study
AU - Thomas de Montpreville, Vincent
AU - Mansuet-Lupo, Audrey
AU - Le Naoures, Cécile
AU - Chalabreysse, Lara
AU - De Muret, Anne
AU - Hofman, Véronique
AU - Rouquette, Isabelle
AU - Piton, Nicolas
AU - Dubois, Romain
AU - Benitez, Jose Carlos
AU - Girard, Nicolas
AU - Besse, Benjamin
AU - Marx, Alexander
AU - Molina, Thierry Jo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH, DE part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2021/10/1
Y1 - 2021/10/1
N2 - 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.
AB - 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.
KW - Immunohistochemistry
KW - Micronodular thymic carcinoma with lymphoid hyperplasia
KW - Thymic neoplasm
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85101589095&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00428-021-03044-2
DO - 10.1007/s00428-021-03044-2
M3 - Article
C2 - 33629132
AN - SCOPUS:85101589095
SN - 0945-6317
VL - 479
SP - 741
EP - 746
JO - Virchows Archiv
JF - Virchows Archiv
IS - 4
ER -