Neuroendocrine Neoplasms of the Female Genitourinary Tract: A Comprehensive Overview
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Renal NENs
2.1. Epidemiology, Presentation, and Pathogenesis
2.2. Pathogenesis
2.3. Imaging
2.4. Prognosis and Management
3. Urinary Bladder NENs
3.1. Epidemiology, Presentation, and Pathogenesis
3.2. Imaging
3.3. Prognosis and Management
4. Ureteral NENs
4.1. Epidemiology, Presentation, and Pathogenesis
4.2. Imaging
4.3. Prognosis and Management
5. Urethral NENs
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Renal Carcinoids | Renal Small-Cell NEC | Renal Large-Cell NEC | Renal Paraganglioma | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cellular arrangements | Trabecular/gyriform, glandular, insular, solid or mixed patterns | Sheets, nests, trabeculae | Solid nesting growth pattern | |
Cellular characteristics | Round or polygonal cells with granular cytoplasm. | Poorly differentiated small round to fusiform cells; scanty stroma and cytoplasm | Large cells with abundant cytoplasm | Round to oval cells (Zellballen); sometimes spindle-shaped elongated cells; abundant granular cytoplasm; |
Nuclei | Round nucleus with finely stippled ribbon-like chromatin; inconspicuous nucleoli | Hyperchromatic nuclei; Nuclear molding; stippled/dispersed chromatin; inconspicuous nucleoli | Pleomorphic nuclei with vesicular chromatin; Prominent nucleoli | Variant nuclei with regular uniform chromatin or hyperchromasia |
Additional features | Calcifications (25% of cases); Absence of frequent mitosis; Low Ki-67 proliferation index | Extensive tumor necrosis; perivascular DNA deposition (Azzopardi phenomenon); Brisk mitoses; Calcifications can be seen. | High mitotic rate (>10/10 per HPF); Large necrotic areas | Highly vascular intervening stroma; Low mitotic index and necrosis |
Immunohistochemistry | Positive for cytokeratin, chromogranin, synaptophysin, gremileus and neuron-specific enolase | Dot-like cytokeratin staining in the cytoplasm; Variable positivity for chromogranin A, synaptophysin, CD56 and NSE; A few cases reported positive staining for TTF-1 [17,31,32] | Diffusely and strongly positive for synaptophysin | Positive for INSM1, synaptophysin and chromogranin; Negative for keratins; Positive tyrosine hydroxylase and nuclear GATS3; scattered S100-sustentacular cells |
Renal Lesion | CT | MRI |
---|---|---|
Clear Cell carcinoma | Heterogeneous mass due to necrotic, cystic and hemorrhagic areas; Strong contrast enhancement in corticomedullary and contrast wash out during nephrographic phases | Hyper vascular lesion; Hyperintense on T2WI and hypo- to isointense on T1WI; Heterogeneous avid enhancement than the rest of RCC types on contrast administration; Microscopic fat in 60% of cases; CSI: >25% signal loss on opposed phase relative to in-phase imaging due to fat content; Tumor pseudo capsule: hypointense rim on T1WI and T2WI. |
Chromophobe carcinoma | Homogeneous to heterogeneous mass | Well circumscribed homogeneous tumors; Iso- to hypointense lesion son T2WI; The lesion enhances greater than papillary but lesser than clear cell renal carcinoma; Central stellate scar in 30–40% of cases; Spoke-wheel enhancement can be observed; Segmental enhancement inversion may be noticed; Calcifications in 38% of cases. |
Papillary carcinoma | Tumors < 3 cm: homogeneous; Tumors ≥ 4 cm: Heterogeneous due to necrosis; Subtle contrast enhancement than ccRCC; Absent enhancement can be observed in 25% of patients; | Well-circumscribed homogeneous mass; Usually <3 cm; Mass: hypointense on T2WI which enhance progressively with contrast administration; CSI: signal loss on in-phase relative to opposed phase imaging due to hemosiderin deposition; Fibrous capsule: hypointense on T1WI & T2WI; |
Renal NET | Heterogeneous solid tumor with cystic component as well; Minimal enhancement on contrast administration; Octreotide scintigraphy: High affinity for somatostatin in 87% of patients. | Heterogeneous signal intensity on T1 and T2WI with areas of high signal intensity on T1WI due to hemorrhage; The mass enhances with contrast administration |
Stage | TNM Category | Description |
---|---|---|
I | T1 N0 M0 | T1–Tumor limited to kidney & ≤7 cm in greatest dimension N0–No lymph node involvement M0–No distant metastasis |
II | T2 N0 M0 | T2–Tumor limited to kidney & >7 cm in greatest dimension |
III | T3 N0 M0 | T3–Tumor extending into the major vein or into the tissue around kidney; but not growing into adrenal gland or beyond Gerota’s fascia |
T1-3 N1 M0 | N1–Tumor spread to regional lymph nodes | |
IV | T4 Any N M0 | T4–Tumor beyond Gerota’s fascia and may be growing into adrenal gland on the top of kidney |
Any T Any N M1 | M1–Distant lymph nodes and/or other organs. |
Stage | TNM Category | Description |
---|---|---|
I | T1 N0 M0 | T1–Pheochromocytoma < 5 cm in greatest dimension; No extra-adrenal invasion; N0–no lymph node metastases; M0–No distant metastases |
II | T2 N0 M0 | T2–Pheochromocytoma ≥ 5 cm, sympathetic paraganglioma of any size; no extra-adrenal invasion |
III | T1 N1 M0 | N1–Lymph node metastases |
III | T2 N1 M0 | |
III | T3 N0 M0 | T3–Tumor of any size with surround tissue invasion (liver, spleen, pancreas and kidneys) |
III | T3 N1 M0 | |
IV | Any T Any N M1 | M1–distant metastases; M1a–Distant metastases to only bone; M1b–Distant metastases to only lymph nodes/liver/lung; M1c–Distant metastases to bone plus multiple other sites |
Histological Features | Well-Differentiated NET | Small-Cell NEC | Large-Cell NEC | Paraganglioma |
---|---|---|---|---|
Cellular arrangements | Anastomosing cords; Glandular; Cribriform structures | Diffuse sheets; Nests | Sheets; Solid nests; Trabeculae; Rosettes | Nests; Diffuse growth; Pseudo rosettes |
Cellular characteristics | Intermediate cuboidal/columnar monomorphic cells with moderate to abundant cytoplasm and eosinophilic granules | Small/intermediate fusiform cells with scant cytoplasm | Large polygonal cells with abundant cytoplasm | Large polygonal cells with moderate cytoplasm |
Nuclei | Small round to oval nuclei with finely stippled chromatin and inconspicuous nucleolus | Small round to oval nuclei with finely granular chromatin, molding and crush artifact; Inconspicuous salt and pepper nucleolus | Large oval nuclei with coarse, granular, vesicular chromatin and prominent nucleolus | Medium round to oval nuclei with smudged, hyperchromatic chromatin and prominent nucleolus |
Additional findings | Infrequent mitotic activity and absent necrosis | High mitotic activity and foci of necrosis; Lymphovascular invasion | Very high mitotic activity and large areas of necrosis | Rare mitotic activity and necrosis |
Stage | TNM Category | Description |
---|---|---|
0a | Ta N0 M0 | Non-invasive papillary carcinoma; No lymph node involvement; No distant metastasis |
0is | Tis N0 M0 | Carcinoma in-situ (“Flat-tumor”) |
I | T1 N0 M0 | Tumor invasion into subepithelial connective tissue (lamina propria) |
II | T2a N0 M0 | Tumor invasion into superficial muscularis propria (inner half of detrusor muscle) |
T2b N0 M0 | Tumor invasion into deep muscularis propria (outer half of detrusor muscle) | |
IIIA | T3a N0 M0 | Microscopic invasion of peri-vesical tissue |
T3b N0 M0 | Macroscopic invasion of peri-vesical tissue (extravesical mass) | |
T4a N0 M0 | Tumor invades any of: prostatic stroma, seminal vesicles, uterus, vagina | |
T1-4a N1 M0 | Single regional lymph node involvement: peri-vesical, obturator, internal and external iliac, or sacral lymph nodes | |
IIIB | T1-4a N2 or N3 M0 | N2–Multiple regional lymph node involvement; N3–Common iliac lymph node involvement |
IVA | T4b Any N M0 | T4b–Tumor invasion into pelvic or abdominal wall |
Any T Any N M1a | M1a–Distant metastases to lymph nodes beyond common iliac arteries | |
IVB | Any T Any N M1b | M1b–Distant metastases to sites such as bones, liver or lungs |
Features | Small-Cell NEC |
---|---|
Gross | Well-defined firm-greyish mass protruding into the ureteral lumen; hemorrhagic areas |
Histology | |
Cellular arrangement | Solid sheets; rosette; nests |
Cellular characteristics | Small to medium sized cells with scant cytoplasm and granular chromatin |
Additional features | Frequent necrotic areas, mitosis and vascular invasion |
Immunohistochemistry | |
Neuroendocrine stains | Chromogranin A, synaptophysin, CD56, neuron-specific enolase |
Epithelial stains | Cytokeratin-7, epithelial membrane antigen, and pan-cytokeratin |
Differential stains | Uroplakin III-negative (positive in umbrella cells of urothelium and transitional cell carcinoma) |
Differential Diagnosis | Distinguishing Feature |
---|---|
Carcinoid tumors | Small cells with low-grade nuclear atypia; low mitotic activity (usually <2/HPF); low Ki-67 index |
Small-cell carcinoma | Small cells (usually less than the diameter of the three small lymphocytes) with scant cytoplasm; fine granular chromatin; absent or inconspicuous nuclei; high miotic activity (≥11/HPF with a median of 80/HPF); frequent large areas of necrosis |
High-grade urothelial carcinoma | Poorly differentiated cells with centrally located nuclei and thick, rough nuclear membranes; Identifiable nucleoli; Irregular chromatin; Positive immunohistochemistry for uroplakin (57–81% of cases) and negative or neuroendocrine markers; |
Primary or metastatic adenocarcinoma | Diffuse glandular morphology; negative neuroendocrine markers on immunohistochemical analyses |
Stage | TNM Staging | Description |
---|---|---|
0 | Ta N0 M0 | Non-invasive papillary tumor |
Tis N0 M0 | Carcinoma in-situ | |
I | T1 N0 M0 | Tumor invasion into sb-epithelial connective tissue through lamina propria |
II | T2 N0 M0 | Tumor invasion into muscularis propria |
III | T3 N0 M0 | Tumor invasion into periureteric fat beyond muscularis propria |
T4 N0 M0 | Tumor invades adjacent organs or through the kidney into the perinephric fat | |
IV | T4 Any N Any M | N1-metastasis in a single lymph node ≤ 2 cm in greatest dimension N2-Metastasis in a single lymph node > 2 cm; or multiple lymph node involvement N3-Metastasis in a lymph node, more than 5 cm in greatest dimension M1-Distant metastasis |
Any T N1-3 Any M |
Differential Diagnosis | Characteristic of Urethral NEN That Helps in Distinguishment |
---|---|
Lymphoma | Positive immunohistochemistry with LCA antigen |
Transitional cell carcinoma | Positive p63 and CD44v6 (80% specific) |
Carcinoid tumor | Abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm and regular nuclei |
Primary neuroectodermal tumor | Larger cell bodies with spread out cytoplasm in dendritic processes |
Metastatic small-cell carcinoma | Positive TTF-1 and presence of primary site on chest CT |
Merkel cell carcinoma | Penile or scrotal skin involvement and presence of punctate paranuclear cytokeratin staining; positive CK20 |
Stage | TNM Category | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
0a | Ta N0 M0 | Ta-Non-invasive papillary, polypoid, or verrucous carcinoma; N0-No lymph node involvement; M0-No distant metastases | Proximal: Partial or complete urethrectomy Distal: Urethra-sparing surgery/urethrectomy/radiotherapy |
0is | Tis N0 M0 | Tis-Carcinoma in-situ | Proximal: Partial or complete urethrectomy Distal: Urethra-sparing surgery/urethrectomy/radiotherapy |
I | T1 N0 M0 | T1-Tumor invasion into subepithelial connective tissue | Proximal: Partial or complete urethrectomy Distal: Urethra-sparing surgery/urethrectomy/radiotherapy |
II | T2 N0 M0 | T2-Tumor invasion into corpus spongiosum/prostate or peri-urethral muscles | Proximal: Partial or complete urethrectomy ± neoadjuvant chemotherapy Distal: Urethra-sparing surgery/urethrectomy/radiotherapy |
III | T1 N1 M0 | N1-Single lymph node involvement ≤ 2 cm in greatest dimension | Inductive chemotherapy + consolidative surgery; chemoradiotherapy |
T2 N1 M0 | Inductive chemotherapy + consolidative surgery; chemoradiotherapy | ||
T3 N0 M0 | T3-Tumor invasion into corpus cavernosum, beyond prostate capsule, anterior vagina and bladder neck | Neoadjuvant chemotherapy + surgery; Surgery + adjuvant radiotherapy | |
T3 N1 M0 | Inductive chemotherapy + consolidative surgery; chemoradiotherapy | ||
IV | T4 N0 M0 | T4-Tumor invasion into adjacent organs (e.g., Bladder) | Neoadjuvant chemotherapy + surgery; Surgery + adjuvant radiotherapy |
T4 N1 M0 | Inductive chemotherapy + consolidative surgery; chemoradiotherapy | ||
Any T N2 M0 | N2-Single lymph node > 2 cm but ≤5 cm or multiple lymph node involvement (≤5 cm) | Inductive chemotherapy + consolidative surgery; chemoradiotherapy | |
Any T Any N M1 | M1-Distant metastases | Systemic therapy |
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Virarkar, M.; Vulasala, S.S.; Gopireddy, D.; Morani, A.C.; Daoud, T.; Waters, R.; Bhosale, P. Neuroendocrine Neoplasms of the Female Genitourinary Tract: A Comprehensive Overview. Cancers 2022, 14, 3218. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14133218
Virarkar M, Vulasala SS, Gopireddy D, Morani AC, Daoud T, Waters R, Bhosale P. Neuroendocrine Neoplasms of the Female Genitourinary Tract: A Comprehensive Overview. Cancers. 2022; 14(13):3218. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14133218
Chicago/Turabian StyleVirarkar, Mayur, Sai Swarupa Vulasala, Dheeraj Gopireddy, Ajaykumar C. Morani, Taher Daoud, Rebecca Waters, and Priya Bhosale. 2022. "Neuroendocrine Neoplasms of the Female Genitourinary Tract: A Comprehensive Overview" Cancers 14, no. 13: 3218. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14133218
APA StyleVirarkar, M., Vulasala, S. S., Gopireddy, D., Morani, A. C., Daoud, T., Waters, R., & Bhosale, P. (2022). Neuroendocrine Neoplasms of the Female Genitourinary Tract: A Comprehensive Overview. Cancers, 14(13), 3218. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14133218