4.4 Article

Insights Obtained from the Nontumorous Glandular Tissue in Patients with Endocrine Tumors

Journal

ENDOCRINE PATHOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

HUMANA PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1007/s12022-023-09759-z

Keywords

Endocrine pathology; Neoplasia; Genetic predisposition; Precursor lesions; Hyperplasia; Atrophy

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The pathology of neoplasia not only focuses on the tumor itself but also provides information about the non-tumorous tissue surrounding the lesion, which can reveal pathogenetic mechanisms and confirm the effects of medical therapies. This article reviews clinically relevant features in endocrine neoplasms and emphasizes the importance of assessing and reporting these features to enhance clinical management.
The pathology of neoplasia tends to focus on the tumor that requires characterization, grading, and staging. However, nontumorous tissue surrounding the lesion can also provide information, particularly about pathogenetic mechanisms. In endocrine tissues, this takes the form of precursor lesions that characterize several genetic predisposition syndromes. In addition, because of the unique functional aspects of endocrine neoplasia, the nontumorous tissue provides evidence of hormone excess, with hyperplasia and/or atrophy and other involutional changes allowing the pathologist to confirm both hormone function by the tumor and the effects of medical therapies. In this article, we review the various clinically relevant features that should be assessed and reported to enhance clinical management of patients with endocrine neoplasms. For example, in thyroid there may be inflammatory thyroiditis or goiter of various etiologies; there may be C-cell hyperplasia either as a preneoplastic lesion in patients with genetic predisposition to medullary thyroid carcinoma or as a reactive phenomenon. Drug-induced changes can be seen in thyroid and adrenal cortex. In neuroendocrine tissues, the nontumorous tissues may show precursor lesions such as endocrine cell hyperplasia/dysplasia; there may be related or unrelated hyperplastic or neoplastic lesions. Some tissues, such as pituitary corticotrophs and adrenal cortex, develop changes that reflect feedback suppression by hormone excess that can serve as biomarkers of tumor functionality and provide enhanced clinicopathologic correlates.

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