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Cytologically Yours: Unknowns: 201401: Case 1
Clinical History
72 year old female with jaundice and a pancreatic mass.
Cytology
Resident Questions
Diagnosis?
Adenocarcinoma
Most common malignant tumor of the pancreas
Accounts for approximately 85% of all pancreatic tumors
Patients are commonly women in the 6th and 7th decades of life
Prognosis is poor
90% of patients die within a year of diagnosis
Association with cigarette smoking, high fat diet, and diabetes mellitus
Triad of weight loss, pain, and jaundice
Usually involve the head of the pancreas
Can obstruct the biliary or pancreatic ducts which can cause a double duct sign on imaging and can also cause painless jaundice
What are some of the cytologic features that lead you to the diagnosis?
Cellular specimen
Predominantly ductal type cells and sparse/absent acinar cells
Pleomorphism
Nuclear crowding and overlapping
Nuclear enlargement (more than 2-3 times the size of red blood cells)
Nuclear membrane irregularity
Three dimensional configuration
Drunken honeycomb
Differential diagnosis?
Chronic pancreatitis
Occurs in 4th and 5th decades
Lack of irregular nuclear contours, macronuclei, anisonucleosis
Monolayer fragments with honeycomb pattern
Cells with well defined cell borders
Negative staining for p53 and CDx-2
Positive staining for SMAD4
Contaminant gastrointestinal epithelium
Gastric
Monolayered tissue fragments with honeycomb arrangement
Uniform nuclei
Luminal Brush border
Intestinal
Large monolayered two dimensional tissue fragments
Honeycomb arrangement of cells
Intermixed goblet cells
Uniform round evenly spaced nuclei
Positive staining for CDX-2 and SMAD4
Negative staining for p53
The presence of mitotic figures does not support the diagnosis of carcinoma. Mitotic figures can be seen in chronic pancreatitis.