Non-gynaecological Cytology
Pancreatic and biliary cytology
Anatomy and histology of the pancreas
Fine needle aspiration (FNA) and other sampling methods
Reporting terminology
Normal cells
Pancreatitis
Pancreatic cysts
Solid tumors
Biliary tract cytology

Ductal adenocarcinoma

It is the most common pancreatic tumor (85-90%). It usually occurs in elderly patients and most commonly involve the head of the pancreas. It has been associated with smoking and recurrent pancreatitis and its prognosis is poor.

Cytologic diagnostic features (moderately to poorly differentiated tumors)

  • Increased cellularity
  • Crowded sheets (with feathered edges)
  • Single malignant cells
  • Nuclear overlapping and disorientation
  • Irregular nuclear contours (notches, grooves, convolutions)
  • Nuclear enlargement and pleomorphism, prominent nucleoli
  • Irregular chromatin distribution (clumping and clearing)
  • Mitoses

Necrosis is a helpful feature, but is absent in half of the cases.

Poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma
Poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma
Adenocarcinoma

Cytologic diagnostic features (well-differentiated tumors)

  • Increased cellularity
  • Cohesive sheets (with rounded edges)
  • Nuclear crowding and overlapping
  • Increased intracytoplasmic mucin
  • Focally irregular nuclear contours (pyramidal and carrot-shaped nuclei)
  • Irregular chromatin clearing
  • Nuclear enlargement

The diagnosis can be difficult in well-differentiated ductal adenocarcinoma, as well as in the setting of chronic pancreatitis (showing reactive ductal atypia), stent placement or radiation. Some have suggested a minimum number of six atypical groups for a definitive diagnosis of well-differentiated adenocarcinoma.

Difficult differential diagnosis: reactive ductal atypia in chronic pancreatitis vs. well differentiated adenocarcinoma

Pitfalls

  • Liver cells
  • Intestinal cells
  • Mesothelial cells
  • Endothelial cells
 

Variants of ductal adenocarcinoma

  • Adenosquamous carcinoma
  • Undifferentiated (anaplastic) carcinoma
  • Mucinous non-cystic carcinoma
  • Signet ring cell carcinoma

Adenosquamous carcinoma is characterized by mucin-producing glandular elements and an admixed squamous component arranged in sheets. It may raise the suspicion of a metastasis.

FNA of undifferentiated carcinoma (anaplastic carcinoma, pleomorphic giant cell carcinoma) yields highly cellular smears composed of pleomorphic epithelioid and spindle cells and bizarre multinucleated tumor giant cells, which are poorly cohesive and arranged in a background of necrosis and inflammatory infiltrate. Foci of glandular differentiation are usually present but may not be sampled by FNA. The differential diagnosis includes metastatic carcinomas and pleomorphic sarcomas.

Undifferentiated carcinoma - cytologic diagnostic features

  • Bizarre, giant, multinucleated cells in loose sheets and single cells
  • High grade, anaplastic nuclear features
  • Cytophagocytosis
  • High mitotic rate and abundant necrosis
  • Rare osteoclast-type giant cells
Undifferentiated carcinoma

 

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