Journal
PATHOLOGY INTERNATIONAL
Volume 70, Issue 11, Pages 844-856Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pin.13009
Keywords
clinicopathologic; diagnosis; juxtaglomerular cell tumor; morphologic; prognosis
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Funding
- Shanghai Science and Technology Development Fund [19MC1911000]
- National Science Foundation of China [81903050]
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The juxtaglomerular cell tumor (JCT) is a rare renal tumor. We re-evaluated the clinicopathologic features of 21 JCTs to summarize their variable morphologies. Immunohistochemical, fluorescentin situhybridization and periodic acid-Schiff stains were routinely performed, and four JCT cases were detected via transmission electron microscopy. The 21 JCTs involved five males and 16 females, ranging in age from 19 years to 69 years (mean, 36.9 years; median, 34 years). The tumors were composed of large, small, or spindle cells with a round, oval or polygonal shape, arranged in various growth patterns. Both necrosis (1/21) and mitosis (2/21, with 1/50HFP, 8/50HFP) was rarely appreciated. All cases were immunoreactive for renin and CD34 (21/21), and few were positive for alpha-SMA (13/21;11/21, focally; 2/21, diffusely,), CD117 (9/21, focally) and synaptophysin (3/21, focally). Ultrastructurally, all four cases exhibited secretory granules in varying sizes in the cytoplasm, two of which exhibited cellular junctions. Almost all cases (20/21) had a favorable prognosis, but one succumbed due to bone and hepatic metastases, which corresponds to malignant JCT. Our study demonstrates that JCTs may have atypical clinical presentations and variable histologic appearances. A familiarity with these features may contribute to a correct diagnosis.
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