Infarcted neuroendocrine tumor following endobronchial ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration of a pulmonary nodule: Typical versus atypical carcinoid a pathological diagnostic dilemma

Introduction: Pulmonary Neuroendocrine tumors have been categorized into high, intermediate and low grade. The distinction between low grade typical carcinoid from atypical carcinoid depends on mitotic count and presence of punctate necrosis. Case presentation: The patient is a 60 year old female wi...

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Main Authors: Sarmad H. Jassim, MD, Roy T. Temes, MD, Joseph Tomashefski, Jr., MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-06-01
Series:Human Pathology: Case Reports
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214330016300943
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spelling doaj-3f961da623c84d4ca8f252fcaa98387d2020-11-25T02:28:56ZengElsevierHuman Pathology: Case Reports2214-33002017-06-0186568Infarcted neuroendocrine tumor following endobronchial ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration of a pulmonary nodule: Typical versus atypical carcinoid a pathological diagnostic dilemmaSarmad H. Jassim, MD0Roy T. Temes, MD1Joseph Tomashefski, Jr., MD2Department of Pathology, MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, United States; Corresponding author at: Department of Pathology, MetroHealth Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United States.Department of Cardiothoracic surgery, MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, United StatesDepartment of Pathology, MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, United StatesIntroduction: Pulmonary Neuroendocrine tumors have been categorized into high, intermediate and low grade. The distinction between low grade typical carcinoid from atypical carcinoid depends on mitotic count and presence of punctate necrosis. Case presentation: The patient is a 60 year old female with past medical history of diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, gastrointestinal reflux disease and cervical myelopathy. An incidental right upper lobe nodule was discovered during hospitalization for post-total knee arthroplasty sepsis. Follow-up CT and PET scans demonstrated size stability with mild hypermetabolic activity. The tumor was excised by a robotic thoracoscopic right upper lobectomy and mediastinal lymph node dissection. A lobulated, tan-yellow, well demarcated firm mass, measuring 1.2 × 1 × 1 cm was grossly identified. Microscopically, the well circumscribed mass demonstrated near complete infarct-like central necrosis with a peripheral viable cellular rim consisting of nests of tumor cells that stained positively with TTF-1, Synaptophysin, Chromogranin, and CD56; and was negative for calcitonin and monoclonal CEA. The mitotic figure count was negligible and met the WHO criteria for typical carcinoid. The proliferative index (Ki-67) was slightly high at 9.29%. Discussion: The unusual central necrosis seen in the tumor and the relatively high proliferative index created a pathological diagnostic dilemma discussed in this report. Keywords: Lung, Neuroendocrine tumors, Carcinoidhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214330016300943
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarmad H. Jassim, MD
Roy T. Temes, MD
Joseph Tomashefski, Jr., MD
spellingShingle Sarmad H. Jassim, MD
Roy T. Temes, MD
Joseph Tomashefski, Jr., MD
Infarcted neuroendocrine tumor following endobronchial ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration of a pulmonary nodule: Typical versus atypical carcinoid a pathological diagnostic dilemma
Human Pathology: Case Reports
author_facet Sarmad H. Jassim, MD
Roy T. Temes, MD
Joseph Tomashefski, Jr., MD
author_sort Sarmad H. Jassim, MD
title Infarcted neuroendocrine tumor following endobronchial ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration of a pulmonary nodule: Typical versus atypical carcinoid a pathological diagnostic dilemma
title_short Infarcted neuroendocrine tumor following endobronchial ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration of a pulmonary nodule: Typical versus atypical carcinoid a pathological diagnostic dilemma
title_full Infarcted neuroendocrine tumor following endobronchial ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration of a pulmonary nodule: Typical versus atypical carcinoid a pathological diagnostic dilemma
title_fullStr Infarcted neuroendocrine tumor following endobronchial ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration of a pulmonary nodule: Typical versus atypical carcinoid a pathological diagnostic dilemma
title_full_unstemmed Infarcted neuroendocrine tumor following endobronchial ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration of a pulmonary nodule: Typical versus atypical carcinoid a pathological diagnostic dilemma
title_sort infarcted neuroendocrine tumor following endobronchial ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration of a pulmonary nodule: typical versus atypical carcinoid a pathological diagnostic dilemma
publisher Elsevier
series Human Pathology: Case Reports
issn 2214-3300
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Introduction: Pulmonary Neuroendocrine tumors have been categorized into high, intermediate and low grade. The distinction between low grade typical carcinoid from atypical carcinoid depends on mitotic count and presence of punctate necrosis. Case presentation: The patient is a 60 year old female with past medical history of diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, gastrointestinal reflux disease and cervical myelopathy. An incidental right upper lobe nodule was discovered during hospitalization for post-total knee arthroplasty sepsis. Follow-up CT and PET scans demonstrated size stability with mild hypermetabolic activity. The tumor was excised by a robotic thoracoscopic right upper lobectomy and mediastinal lymph node dissection. A lobulated, tan-yellow, well demarcated firm mass, measuring 1.2 × 1 × 1 cm was grossly identified. Microscopically, the well circumscribed mass demonstrated near complete infarct-like central necrosis with a peripheral viable cellular rim consisting of nests of tumor cells that stained positively with TTF-1, Synaptophysin, Chromogranin, and CD56; and was negative for calcitonin and monoclonal CEA. The mitotic figure count was negligible and met the WHO criteria for typical carcinoid. The proliferative index (Ki-67) was slightly high at 9.29%. Discussion: The unusual central necrosis seen in the tumor and the relatively high proliferative index created a pathological diagnostic dilemma discussed in this report. Keywords: Lung, Neuroendocrine tumors, Carcinoid
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214330016300943
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