Article Text
Abstract
Clinical question A 45-year-old woman presented with painless vaginal bleeding for 2 months. A biopsy was taken from the uterine cervix, and poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma was suspected. After three cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy treatment, the patient underwent radical hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, and pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy.
Review the high quality, interactive digital Aperio slide at http://virtualacp.com/JCPCases/jclinpath-2018-205081-1/ and consider your diagnosis.
What is your diagnosis?
Typical carcinoid.
Poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma.
Atypical carcinoid.
Small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma.
Sex cord-stromal tumours of the uterine cervix.
What is your diagnosis?
The correct answer is after the discussion.
Discussion Neuroendocrine tumours of the uterine cervix are a rare cancer of the female reproductive system, accounting for approximately 1% of all female cervical malignancies.1 2 In 1997, a consensus workshop suggested four types of neuroendocrine tumours of the uterine cervix: typical and atypical carcinoid tumours, small cell neuroendocrine carcinomas, and large cell carcinomas.1 Among all the categories, small cell neuroendocrine carcinomas are of the highest incidence. A PubMed search revealed that only 15 cases of atypical carcinoid tumours of the uterine cervix have been reported.3 4 Because of infrequency, the clinical and pathological features of atypical carcinoid tumours of the uterine cervix remain unknown.
Atypical carcinoids are characterised by great cytological atypia, which means abundant or scanty cytoplasm and visible nucleoli with granular chromatin. Tumour cells lined up in insular, trabecular, columnar and nested organoid patterns; they are epithelioid in appearance, but can be spindled (figure 1A). Necrosis could be observed in some areas and mitotic activity is up to 10 mitotic figures/10 high-power field (figure 1B). On immunohistochemistry, atypical carcinoids are diffuse and positive for Syn, CgA and CD56 (figure 2). An electron microscopic test was done, and several neuroendocrine granules were distributed in the tumour cell plasma (figure 3).
Neuroendocrine tumours of the uterine cervix are sometimes combined with adenocarcinoma (figure 1C); their cytological and immunohistochemical features showed the neuroendocrine and adenomatous components shared the same origin.
- carcinoid
- cervical cancer
- gynaecological pathology
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Footnotes
Handling editor Iskander Chaudhry.
Contributors CL wrote the whole manuscript, and YS diagnosed and provided the case.
Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Disclaimer no
Competing interests None declared.
Patient consent Obtained.
Provenance and peer review Commissioned; internally peer reviewed.