Discussion
Diagnosis With Brief Discussion
- Diagnosis
- Atypical Carcinoid
- Radiologic Findings
- Atypical carcinoids have clinicopathologic features intermediate between the typical carcinoids and small cell carcinomas. Unlike typical carcinoids, the majority of atypical carcinoids are peripheral (50-100%), are associated with a history of cigarette smoking (83-94%), occur more often in men (2:1) and tend to occur in a slightly older age group (mean age in fifties to sixties).
The histopathologic features that distinguish atypical carcinoid from typical carcinoid are: (1) increased mitotic activity ( an average of 10 mitoses per 10 high power fields); (2) greater cytological pleomorphism with larger, vesicular nuclei, larger, more frequent nucleoli and higher nuclear to cytoplasmic ratios; (3) increased cellularity and architectural irregularities; and (4) tumor necrosis.
The radiographic features of atypical carcinoids of the lung are a round or ovoid shaped, 1.5 to 10 cm sized, contrast-enhancing, peripheral mass (21/32). These masses showed slight to marked lobulation(15/21), and although some are smoothly bordered, but others exhibited a spiculated margin. Less commonly, they included multilobulated masses, a thin-walled cavity, lobar atelectasis without demonstrable mass.
- Brief Review
- References
- Keywords
- Lung, Malignant tumor,