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姓 名: | ××× | 性别: | 男性 | 年龄: | 65岁 |
标本名称: | 皮损结节 | ||||
简要病史: | 左大腿内侧皮损4年,明显增大半年。PE:皮损黑褐色,半球形。 | ||||
肉眼检查: | 梭形皮肤2.5x1x0.3cm,皮表灰褐色隆起高出皮表0.2cm,直径0.8cm,中央灰白色。切面灰褐灰白色。 |
BCC伴附件分化(basal cell carcinoma with adnexal differentiation)这种变异型在临床上和预后方面,与其它类型BCC没有区别。它主要是BCC的一个组织学分类和鉴别诊断问题。
组织学上,表现为两个方面。一方面是BCC的成分,例如连接表皮的基底细胞蓓蕾样的结构,具有BCC特征的片巢以及巢周边裂隙等,可以表现出前述任何一种BCC的形态结构(经典的或其它诸如腺样或管状的、色素性、硬化性的等变异型成分);另一方面,表现出各种皮肤附件成分分化,多见的是毛源性分化(如毛鞘上皮、毛乳头等),也可见皮脂腺甚至汗腺分化。
具有汗腺分化的时候要特别注意与汗腺癌鉴别,因为其预后不一样。
BCC伴附件分化中的有的病例,可能会与皮肤附件肿瘤重叠。这时,要注意重叠的良性成分的含量。如果说是以良性成分占绝对优势,有学者建议,这种情况最好还是诊断为良性附件肿瘤,如:毛发上皮瘤、毛母细胞瘤和毛鞘瘤,甚至基底细胞样毛源性错构瘤等。
本例的组织病理形态可以看出,肿瘤与表皮关系密切,巢周裂隙易见,基底样细胞的区域占优势,细胞巢的形状甚不规则,有的区域呈浸润状,间有毛源性分化。IHC标记BerBP4阳性较强,而且Ki-67标记增殖指数较高。患者年龄偏大,结合生长部位,诊断为BCC伴毛源性分化可能更为妥当。
仅供参考!
基底细胞癌的形态复杂多变。是所有单一病种的上皮性肿瘤中分型最为复杂的恶性肿瘤。参阅WHO分类,对基底细胞癌(BCC)的分型如下:
1)浅表型BCC
2)结节型BCC
3)微小结节型BCC
4)浸润性BCC
5)纤维上皮型BCC
6)BCC伴附件分化
7)BCC鳞状分化(或译为基底细胞鳞癌,不同其它器官的基底样鳞癌)(basaosguamous carcinoma)
8)角化型BCC
9)其它变异型:
(1) 囊性BCC
(2)腺样BCC
(3)硬化性BCC
(4)漏斗形囊状BCC
(5)色素性BCC
(6)其它罕见的杂类:
a. 透明细胞型BCC
b. “印戒细胞”型BCC
c. 颗粒细胞型BCC
d. 巨细胞型(怪异细胞型)BCC
e. 釉质样BCC
f. 内分泌型BCC
g. 神经鞘样BCC
这是金主任帮我回答了关于诊断的问题
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谢谢金主任!
这是一位网友对诊断的回答
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突击学习,本例形态学集中在基底细胞癌和毛母细胞瘤的鉴别。这两种瘤形态学相似,老师就其鉴别诊断的免疫组化分析提出问题,就BerEP4可以做为基底细胞肿瘤和鳞状细胞癌鉴别的重要marker,但是在基底细胞癌和毛母细胞瘤(Modern Pathology (2008) 21, 178–185; doi:10.1038/modpathol.3801000; published online 7 December 2007,57% of desmoplastic trichoepithelioma)中都有表达,
明天在学习继续写
In trichoblastomas, CD10 typically highlights the peritumoral stroma, including papillary mesenchymal bodies, with minimal patchy staining of basaloid cells. In contrast, in BCC, the stroma is negative and basaloid cells variably strongly positive with CD10. Diffuse Bcl-2 positivity is reported in BCC, whereas the basal layer alone is highlighted in TE. The authors have found this to be variable and unreliable in practice. CD34 may highlight the peritumoural stroma in the desmoplastic variant of TE and not in infiltrative BCC, but this is also an unreliable finding in the authors’ experience. Merkel cells can be highlighted with Cam5.2 or CK20 and are absent from BCC but increased in number in trichoblastoma.
MINI-SYMPOSIUM: CUTANEOUS EPITHELIAL TUMOURS
The use of immunohistochemistry in the differential diagnosis of common epithelial tumours of the skin
D.S.A. Sanders , a, and R.A. Carra
aDepartment of Pathology, Lakin Road, Warwick CV34 5BJ, UK
Available online 25 August 2007.
BerEP4
BerEP4 is a monoclonal antibody to a 34/49-kDa glycoprotein on the surface of most epithelial cells, with the exception of superficial layers of squamous epithelia.1 BerEP4 stains the vast majority of non-cutaneous epithelia and is highly conserved in the tumours derived from them, including non-cutaneous squamous cell carcinomas (SCC).1 In normal skin, there is reported positivity of the lower part of telogen hairs (secondary hair germ), matrix and outer root sheath (ORS) of vellus hairs, early anagen of terminal follicles (but not any part of mature anagen follicles), and the lower part of the epithelial strand of late catagen follicles.[2] and [3] Similar strong positive staining is seen in lining cells of eccrine and apocrine coils, with more variable staining of sweat duct lining cells and the acrosyryngium.3 F.J. Jimenez, J.L. Burchette Jr, J.M. Grichnik and M.G. Hitchcock, Ber-EP4 immunoreactivity in normal skin and cutaneous neoplasms, Mod Pathol 8 (1995), pp. 854–858. View Record in Scopus | Cited By in Scopus (32)3 The epidermis, follicular mantle, sebaceous glands and all non-epithelial tissues are negative[1] and [3] (Fig. 1A–C).
Figure 1. BerEP4 staining in normal skin and basal cell carcinoma (BCC): (A) weak staining in upper eccrine duct and acrosyryngium; (B) weak staining in lower sweat duct and strong staining in sweat gland coils; (C) outer root sheath telogen and anagen vellus buds (inset showing perifollicular Merkel cells); (D) nodular BCC; (E) metatypical and infiltrative BCC with weaker staining; (F) sebeorrhoeic keratosis (left side negative) in collision with superficial BCC; (G) fibroepithelioma of Pinkus; and (H) perineural invasion from a micronodular BCC.
Carcinoembryonic antigen
Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) is a glycoprotein initially described as a colonic oncofetal antigen,32 but subsequently shown to be expressed in a variety of normal human tissues33 including squames.34 Anti-CEA antibodies are now designated ‘CD66’ with a subclassification a–e depending on which epitope of the antigen is recognized. In normal skin, membranous CEA positivity can occasionally be seen in suprabasal squamous cells of the epidermis, and on the inner lining of sweat gland coils (including canaliculi), dermal ducts and acrosyringium.35 Monoclonal CEA can be used as a marker of ductal/glandular differentiation in skin tumours, and may also highlight mature squamous differentiation. However, in the authors’ experience, immunostaining is sometimes inconsistent and less sensitive for lumina than EMA.
Bcl-2, p53 and Ki-67
Bcl-2 is an anti-apoptotic protein residing on the outer mitochondrial membrane. It is implicated in the pathogenesis of several common cancers by inhibiting programmed cell death. In normal skin, Bcl-2 stains the majority of keratinocytes in the basal epidermis, cells of the ORS, mesenchymal cells of the follicular papillae, and clear cells of eccrine glands.57 Diffuse cytoplasmic Bcl-2 expression is reported in BCC[57] and [58] and is reported to be useful in the distinction of BCC (diffuse staining) from TE (staining of basal layer only)59 and BCC and solar keratosis (latter negative).60
p53 is a tumour-suppressor gene and many p53 mutations result in a protein product that is unusually stable and becomes detectable by immunohistochemistry. Ultra-violet light is known to induce both overexpression of wild-type p53 and cause specific mutations in the p53 gene, and a discrepancy between cutaneous tumours with positive immunostaining and those with mutation has been reported.61 Nuclear accumulation of p53 protein is a feature of the majority of malignant adnexal and epidermal tumours including BCC,62 SCC and Bowen's disease,63 and is confined to the areas of basal atypia in solar keratosis.63 Hence, p53 immunostaining may have some utility in the differential diagnosis of intra-epidermal tumours (Fig. 7) and aids the distinction between basaloid proliferations (follicular induction) over dermatofibromas (rarely p53 positive) and the superficial subtype of BCC that they resemble.64 p53 immunostaining is of lesser value in differentiating benign from malignant skin tumours, as evidenced by similar staining patterns reported between BCC and TE, and eccrine poroma and porocarcinoma.[65] and [66]
Full-size image (175K) |
Figure 7. Clonal Bowen's: (A) low power of a clonal tumour and (B) high power showing uniform but atypical, acantholytic cells. Negative Cam5.2 is against extramammary Paget's and negative S100 against melanoma. p53 diffusely strongly positive.
Ki-67 (MIB 1) is a proliferation marker with a pattern of nuclear positivity. Demonstration of the proliferation index in skin tumours, in conjunction with the mitotic index, is used by many pathologists to help differentiate between benign and potentially malignant tumours. p53 positivity in conjunction with Ki-67 positivity is reported to be a feature of malignancy in the differential diagnosis of hidradenoma from hidradenocarcinoma, although histological parameters remain paramount.67
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