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Title: High-grade neuroendocrine carcinoma of the ampulla of vater: a clinicopathologic and immunohistochemical analysis of 14 cases. Author: Nassar H, Albores-Saavedra J, Klimstra DS. Journal: Am J Surg Pathol; 2005 May; 29(5):588-94. PubMed ID: 15832081. Abstract: We describe the clinical and pathologic features of 14 cases of high-grade neuroendocrine carcinoma (HGNEC) of the ampulla of Vater classified according to WHO classification of lung tumors into small cell carcinoma (SCC, 6 cases) and large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC, 8 cases) types. The immunohistochemical findings were compared with those of 13 cases of primary poorly differentiated ampullary adenocarcinomas (PDACA) lacking neuroendocrine morphology. The mean age of 10 males and 4 females was 70 years. The mean tumor size was 2.5 cm. Ten of 13 patients had lymph node metastases (mean, 2.3 nodes involved). Documented sites of distant metastases included brain and liver. Overall, 64% of patients with ampullary HGNEC died of disease (mean follow-up, 14.5 months). Four patients had no evidence of disease after resection (mean, 20 months). Half of the tumors were associated with adenomas of the adjacent mucosa, 2 with high-grade dysplasia. Two HGNECs were combined with a conventional adenocarcinoma and another with a squamous cell carcinoma component. By immunohistochemistry, the HGNECs were positive for cytokeratins (AE1/AE3, 100%; Cam5.2, 67%; CK7, 87%; CK20, 38%), similar to the pattern found in PDACAs. p27 expression was lost in 1 case of HGNEC and in all PDACAs. Retinoblastoma (Rb) protein expression was lost in 60% of HGNECs and in none of the PDACA cases. In conclusion, HGNECs of the ampulla are rare (2%-3% of ampullary tumors in our material). The clinical course parallels that of their pulmonary counterparts and appears to be worse than that of locally advanced ampullary adenocarcinomas. The association with adenoma and or conventional adenocarcinoma components may suggest a common pathway in the initial carcinogenesis of these two types of tumors. Loss of Rb expression, a characteristic finding in pulmonary SCCs, is present in almost half of ampullary HGNECs. In contrast, p27 expression is lost in PDACAs and retained in most HGNECs. Thus, there are differences in the molecular phenotypes of these two types of ampullary carcinoma, supporting the distinction of poorly differentiated carcinomas with a neuroendocrine phenotype from those without.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]