4.6 Article

The Morphologic Spectrum of Gastric Type 1 EnterochromaffineLike Cell Neuroendocrine Tumors

Journal

MODERN PATHOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.modpat.2023.100098

Keywords

gastric; gastritis; metaplasia; autoimmune; AMAG; ECL cell; neuroendocrine; NET

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This study summarizes the histomorphology of well-differentiated gastric neuroendocrine tumors (gNETs) in patients with autoimmune metaplastic atrophic gastritis (AMAG). It found that most type 1 ECL-cell gNETs were low-grade and multifocal, but a significant proportion displayed unconventional morphologies. Unconventional gNETs grew within the mucosa and the background mucosa of patients with gNETs had already progressed to endstage metaplasia.
Although most well-differentiated gastric neuroendocrine tumors (gNETs) arise from enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells in patients with autoimmune metaplastic atrophic gastritis (AMAG), the morphologic spectrum of these type 1 ECL-cell gNETs is not well defined. The extent of metaplastic progression in the background mucosa of AMAG patients with gNETs is likewise unclear. Here we report the histomorphology of 226 gNETs, including 214 type 1 gNETs (78 cases from 50 AMAG patients) pooled from a population with high AMAG prevalence. Most type 1 gNETs were <1.0 cm, of low grade, and multifocal, consistent with the results of previous reports. However, a high proportion (70/214, 33%) displayed unusual gNET morphologies not previously appreciated in AMAG patients. Unlike other type 1 gNETs with conventional neuroendocrine tumor morphologies, unconventional type 1 gNETs displayed cribriform networks of atrophic cells embedded within myxoid matrix (secretory-cribriform variant, 59%), sheets of deceptively bland discohesive cells resembling inflammatory infiltrates (lympho-plasmacytoid variant, 31%), or wreath-like arrangements of columnar cells wrapped around collagenous cores (pseudopapillary variant, 14%). Another unusual feature was that unconventional gNETs grew laterally within the mucosa (50/70, 71%) and were only rarely sampled from the submucosa (3/70, 4%). These features also differed from the conspicuous radial nodules (99/135, 73%) and frequent submucosal involvement (57/135, 42%) observed for conventional gNETs (P < .0001). Irrespective of morphology, type 1 gNETs were nearly always detected at first AMAG diagnosis (45/50, 90%) and tended to persist thereafter (34/43, 79%), despite similar clinical symptoms and laboratory values between AMAG pa-tients with gNETs and those without. However, unlike AMAG patients without gNETs (n = 50), the background mucosa in patients with gNETs (n = 50) had already progressed to the morphologic equivalent of end-stage metaplasia (P < .0001). This included diffuse loss of parietal cells (92% vs 52%), complete intestinal metaplasia (82% vs 40%), and pancreatic metaplasia (56% vs 6%). Thus, type 1 ECL-cell gNETs are morphologically heterogeneous with a high prevalence of unconventional gNET morphol-ogies. They tend to present silently at first AMAG diagnosis as multifocal lesions that persist within fields of mature metaplasia.(c) 2023 United States & Canadian Academy of Pathology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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