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Benign sinonasal neoplasms and tumor-like lesions. Prof.Alena Skálová, MD,PhD Charles University, Faculty of Medicine, Plzen, Czech Republic. EScoP Belgrade 2011, 7-9th April, 2011, Belgrade, Serbia. Anatomy of nasal cavity and sinonasal region. Benign lesions of sinonasal region.
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Benign sinonasal neoplasms and tumor-like lesions Prof.Alena Skálová, MD,PhD Charles University, Faculty of Medicine, Plzen, Czech Republic EScoP Belgrade 2011, 7-9th April, 2011, Belgrade, Serbia
Benign lesions of sinonasal region • Sinonasal polyps • Sinonasal hamartomatous and teratoid lesions • Benign epithelial neoplasms • Papillomas • Salivary gland-type adenomas • Benign sinonasal soft tissue neoplasms
Sinonasal polyps • Most sinonasal polyps are of allergic origin • consist largely of myxoid edematous tissue with pseudocysts containing eosinophilic proteinaceous material and inflammatory cells • heavy infiltration by eosinophils • marked thickening of basement membranes • goblet cell metaplasia
Antrochoanal angiomatoid polyp • 3-6% of all patients with nasal polyps • Usually solitary, at any age, most in young adults • Removed by curretage, recurrences- 25% • Clinical symptoms • nasal obstruction, epistaxis • susceptible to vascular injury • Origin within sinus, passage through constrictive ostia- characteristic vascular changes
Angiomatoid nasal polyps • arising from inflammatory nasal polyps are benign lesions with frequent recurrences • may become partially or extensively infarcted • which results in hemorrhage, necrosis and erosion of the surrounding tissues including the skeletal bones • histological resemblance to various benign and malignant tumors Heffner DK. Sinonasal angiosarcoma? Not likely (a brief description of infarcted nasal polyps). Ann Diagnostic Pathology 2010: 14: 233-234.
Histology • Early angiomatoid vascular changes • Hyperemia, congestion, early hemorhagic necrosis, interstitial edema • Late angiomatoid vascular changes • Congestion with organizing vascular thrombi, neovascularization (granulation tissue), fibrosis, ulcerations, necrosis • Pseudosarcomatous stromal cell change-pitfall
Angiomatoid nasal polyps (ANP) • 45 cases of ANP were retrieved from consultation registry in Pilsen • 32 men and 13 women • Sites included • nasal septum (14/41) • antrum Highmori (12/41), ethmoid sinuses (5/41) lateral wall of nasal cavity (5/41), sphenoid sinus (1/41), and non-specific nasal cavity (4/41) Hadravsky L, Skalova A, Michal M. Angiomatoid nasal polyp: often misdiagnosed and little known lesion. Report of 45 cases. Modern Pathology 2011: 24: 278A (Abstract).
Angiomatoid nasal polyps (ANP) • X-ray or computed tomography scans were performed in 19 cases and bone erosions/deviations occurred in 4 cases of them • Initial diagnoses submitted by referring pathologists • angiofibroma 32%, hemangioma 24%, hemangiopericytoma 16%, angiosarcoma 12%, pyogenic granuloma and hemangio-endotelioma, both at 8% • None of the patients died of the disease and there has been no progression in any patient • Recurrence was recorded in 30% (9/30) Hadravsky L, Skalova A, Michal M. Angiomatoid nasal polyp: often misdiagnosed and little known lesion. Report of 45 cases. Modern Pathology 2011: 24: 278A (Abstract).
Hamartomas of respiratory tract • Rare tumor like lesions of sinonasal mucosa and nasopharynx • Respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartoma (REAH) • Seromucinous hamartoma • nasal chondromesenchymal hamartoma • Mixed chondro-osseous REAH Wenig BM, Heffner DK. Respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartomas of the sinonasal tract and nasopharynx: a clinicopathologic study of 31 cases. Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol 1995:104:639-645.
Seromucinous (glandular) hamartomas • polypoid lesions characterized by epithelial proliferations of small glands, acini, and tubules growing haphazaradly in clusters and lobules • devoid of myoepithelial cells Weinreb I, et al. Seromucinous hamartomas: a clinicopathological study of a sinonasal glandular lesion lacking myoepithelial cells. Histopathology 2009:54:205-213.
Seromucinous hamartoma of sinonasal tract • Uncommon, under-reported entity • Residual lobular architecture, bland morphology • Absence of epithelial tufting, papillae, back-to back glands • Absence of invasion • Spectrum with REAH and low-grade sinonasal adenocarcinoma Jo VY, Mills SE, Cathro HP, Carlson DL, Stelow EB. Low-grade sinonasal adenocarcinomas. The association with and distinction from respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartomas and other glandular lesions. Am J Surg Pathol 2009:33:401-408.
Spectrum from seromucinous hamartoma to REAH Weinreb et al: Histopathology 2009
Differential diagnosis of sinonasal hamartomas • Low-grade sinonasal adenocarcinoma • LG tubulo-papillary adenocarcinoma • Schneiderian benign papilloma • Oncocytic variant • Salivary gland type adenoma
Sinonasal adenocarcinomas (SNAC) • uncommon malignancies that show a variety of growth patterns • classified as intestinal and non-intestinal types, the latter subclassified as low grade and high grade
Low grade tubulopapillary adenocarcinoma of the nasal cavity in 72-y old man, slowly growing tumour- of nasal mucosa, filling the middle meatus, Presented with nasal obstruction and recurrent attacks of chronic hyperplastic rhinitis for at least 5 years
Sinonasal adenocarcinomas (SNAC) • Recently, some cases of low-grade sinonasal adenocarcinomas associated with REAH were reported • possibly implicating REAH as a precursor lesion for at least a subset of SNAC Jo, et al. Low-grade sinonasal adenocarcinomas. The association with and distinction from respiratory epithelial adenomatoid hamartomas and other glandular lesions. Am J Surg Pathol 2009:33:401-408.
29 LG sinonasal adenocarcinoma reviwed • 6 of them associated with REAH • REAH may be precursor of LG sinonasal adenoca
Benign epithelial neoplasms PapillomasSalivary gland-type adenomas
Sinonasal papillomas • Squamous cell papilloma • Schneiderian papilloma • Exophytic • Inverted • oncocytic