TY - JOUR
T1 - Corpuscular thymoma
T2 - Entity or variant of organotypical thymomas WHO B2/B3?
AU - Hubert Laeng, R.
AU - Eimoto, Tadaaki
AU - Kuo, T. T.
AU - Zettl, A.
AU - Marx, A.
AU - Moschopulos, Michael
AU - Tateyama, Hisashi
AU - Shimokawa, Kuniyasu
PY - 2006/10/10
Y1 - 2006/10/10
N2 - Hassall's corpuscles are regular structures in the medulla of the normal thymus and in non-neoplastic thymic conditions, e.g. in multilocular thymic cysts. In thymomas, however, they are inconsistently found, and are believed to indicate medullary differentiation of WHO type B1-3 thymomas. We present five organotypical thymomas resembling WHO type B2 and B3 thymomas, but with an abundance of Hassall's corpuscles. We wonder whether this exceedingly rare observation might herald a distinct entity. Four tumors were asymptomatic, incidental findings and of low Masaoka stage (I or II) [20]. One patient suffered from myasthenia gravis which disappeared upon surgical removal of the thymus, while all other patients had no concomitant autoimmune disease. Two patients had a relapse-free follow-up of 12 and 2 years, respectively, upon curative surgery, and another tumor was an autopsy finding; follow-up data of two more recent cases was not yet available. The neoplastic epithelium other than Hassall's corpuscles was arranged either in a cortical type B2 pattern or in type B3 solid cords. In all examples, there was cyst formation, inflammatory reaction and repair, indicative of a long-standing condition. Immature T cells were present in all instances. "Corpuscular thymomas" morphologically resemble WHO type B2 and B3 thymomas, but appear biologically indolent and are rarely associated with myasthenia gravis. Whether they qualify for a separate entity has to be proven by larger series, including genetic studies.
AB - Hassall's corpuscles are regular structures in the medulla of the normal thymus and in non-neoplastic thymic conditions, e.g. in multilocular thymic cysts. In thymomas, however, they are inconsistently found, and are believed to indicate medullary differentiation of WHO type B1-3 thymomas. We present five organotypical thymomas resembling WHO type B2 and B3 thymomas, but with an abundance of Hassall's corpuscles. We wonder whether this exceedingly rare observation might herald a distinct entity. Four tumors were asymptomatic, incidental findings and of low Masaoka stage (I or II) [20]. One patient suffered from myasthenia gravis which disappeared upon surgical removal of the thymus, while all other patients had no concomitant autoimmune disease. Two patients had a relapse-free follow-up of 12 and 2 years, respectively, upon curative surgery, and another tumor was an autopsy finding; follow-up data of two more recent cases was not yet available. The neoplastic epithelium other than Hassall's corpuscles was arranged either in a cortical type B2 pattern or in type B3 solid cords. In all examples, there was cyst formation, inflammatory reaction and repair, indicative of a long-standing condition. Immature T cells were present in all instances. "Corpuscular thymomas" morphologically resemble WHO type B2 and B3 thymomas, but appear biologically indolent and are rarely associated with myasthenia gravis. Whether they qualify for a separate entity has to be proven by larger series, including genetic studies.
KW - Autoimmune disease
KW - Cyst formation
KW - Hassall's corpuscles
KW - Thymic carcinoma
KW - Thymoma
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33748644724&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.prp.2006.06.001
DO - 10.1016/j.prp.2006.06.001
M3 - 文章
C2 - 16887284
AN - SCOPUS:33748644724
SN - 0344-0338
VL - 202
SP - 697
EP - 704
JO - Pathology Research and Practice
JF - Pathology Research and Practice
IS - 10
ER -