Title: Pathology of the Pancreas
1Pathology of the Pancreas
- Alyssa Krasinskas, MD
- krasinskasam_at_upmc.edu
- January 6, 2003
2Normal Pancreas- Gross Micro
3Congenital Anomalies
- Agenesis
- Pancreatic Divisum
- Annular pancreas
- Heterotopic pancreas
- Cysts
- True Congenital
- Acquired (pseudocysts)
- Neoplastic
4Congenital Anomalies -Heterotopic Pancreas (in
stomach)
5Congenital Anomalies -Heterotopic Pancreas (in
stomach)
6Congenital Anomalies - Cysts
- Simple Cyst
- Ductal derived
- Microscopic to 3-5 cm
- Lined by flat cuboidal duct-type epithelium
- Filled with fluid
- Usually solitary and asymptomatic
- Cysts associated with other diseases
- Polycystic kidney disease
- Cysts in kidney, liver, pancreas
- Von Hippel-Lindau disease
- Cysts in pancreas, liver, kidney
- CNS angiomas
7Congenital Anomalies -Pancreatic Cyst - Gross
Micro
Modern Pathology 15154-158 (2002)
8Acute Pancreatitis
- Autodigestion and inflammation of the pancreas
- Most common causes
- Alcoholism
- Obstruction
- Gallstones
- Tumor, scar, congenital abnormality
- Possible mechanisms
- Duct obstruction
- Acinar cell injury
- Defective intracellular transport
9Acute Pancreatitis - Pathology
- Edema (microvascular leakage)
- Fat necrosis and saponification (release of
lipolytic enzymes) - Interstitial hemorrhage (destruction of blood
vessel walls) - Parenchymal necrosis (release of proteolytic
enzymes) - Acute inflammation
- Mild cases
- Edema, fat necrosis and saponification
- Severe cases (necrotizing pancreatitis)
- Necrosis of acinar cells, ducts, islets
- Fat necrosis (within and outside of abdomen)
- Necrosis of blood vessels - hemorrhage
10Acute Pancreatitis - Pathology
- Edema (microvascular leakage)
- Fat necrosis and saponification (release of
- lipolytic enzymes)
- Interstitial hemorrhage (destruction of blood
- vessel walls)
- Parenchymal necrosis (release of proteolytic
- enzymes)
- Acute inflammation
11Acute Pancreatitis - Pathology
- Mild cases
- Edema, fat necrosis and saponification
- Severe cases (necrotizing pancreatitis)
- Necrosis of acinar cells, ducts, islets
- Fat necrosis (within and outside of abdomen)
- Necrosis of blood vessels - hemorrhage
12Acute Pancreatitis - Gross
Parenchymal necrosis
Acute pancreatitis
13Acute Pancreatitis Micro(autodigestion)
14Acute Pancreatitis Micro (fat necrosis)
15Acute Necrotizing Pancreatitis - Gross
16Chronic Pancreatitis
- Recurrent bouts of inflammation leads to loss of
pancreatic parenchyma and replacement by fibrosis - Primary causes
- Alcohol abuse
- Hypercalcemia / hyperlipoproteinemia
- Pancreas divisum
- Hereditary pancreatitis
17Chronic Pancreatitis - Pathology
- Loss of lobular appearance of pancreas
- Loss of exocrine tissue (typically not islets)
- Irregularly distributed fibrosis
- Reduced size of pancreas
- Inflammation
- Destruction of ducts ductal dilatation
- Pseudocysts (25 of cases)
18Chronic Pancreatitis - Gross
19Chronic Pancreatitis- Micro
20Sequelae - Acute Pancreatitis
- Systemic complications
- Shock
- Organ failure
- DIC
- Pancreatic abscesses
- Pseudocysts
- Duodenal obstruction
21Sequelae - Chronic Pancreatitis
- Duct obstruction
- Pseudocysts
- Malabsorption
- Secondary diabetes
22Pancreatic Pseudocysts
- Localized collections of pancreatic
- secretions (within or adjacent to pancreas)
- Virtually all arise after a bout of acute
- or chronic pancreatitis
- Lack a true epithelial lining
- Lined by macrophages, fibrosis
- Different from sterile pancreatic abscesses
- Collections of neutrophils following liquefactive
necrosis of pancreatic parenchyma
23Pancreatic Pseudocyst - Gross
24Pancreatic Pseudocyst - Micro
25Pancreatic Pseudocyst
26NeoplasiaTumors of the Exocrine Pancreas
27Ductal Adenocarcinoma
- Most common neoplasm of the pancreas
- 5th leading cause of cancer death in the US
- 28,000 new cases (and nearly as many deaths) per
year - Most common between 60 80 years of age
- Slight male predominance (1.61)
28Ductal Adenocarcinoma Risk Factors
- Cigarette smoking
- High fat diets
- Chronic pancreatitis
- Diabetes mellitus
- Chemical (carcinogen) exposure
29Ductal Adenocarcinoma Genetic Risk Factors
- Hereditary breast and ovarian cancer
- BRCA2 families
- Hereditary pancreatitis (50X!)
- Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome
- HNPCC
30Ductal Adenocarcinoma- Clinical Features
- Painless jaundice
- Abdominal pain
- Weight loss
- Migratory thrombophlebitis
TROUSSEAU SIGN
31Ductal Adenocarcinoma- Molecular Genetics
- K-RAS point mutations
- (present in gt90 of pancreatic cancers)
- Tumor suppressor gene mutations
- P53 (present in 60-80)
- p16
- HER/2-neu overexpression
- (present in 70)
32Ductal Adenocarcinoma- Gross Pathology
- Most occur in the head of the pancreas (60)
- 15 in the body
- 5 in the tail
- 20 diffuse
- Poorly circumscribed, grey-white, firm masses
- Can infiltrate outside the pancreas into other
organs
33Ductal Adenocarcinoma- Histopathology
- Arise from ductal (glandular) epithelium
- Typically moderately to poorly differentiated
adenocarcinoma - Perineural and angiolymphatic invasion common
- Almost always associated with chronic
pancreatitis - Histologic variants
- Adenosquamous Carcinoma
- Anaplastic Carcinoma
- Undifferentiated carcinoma with osteoclast-like
giant cells
34Ductal Adenocarcinoma - Gross
35Ductal Adenocarcinoma - Micro
36Ductal Adenocarcinoma - Micro
Moderately differentiated
37Ductal Adenocarcinoma - Micro
38Ductal Adenocarcinoma - Micro
Perineural invasion
NERVE
39Ductal Adenocarcinoma- Treatment
- Surgical resection
- Pancreaticoduodenectomy (Whipple procedure) for
tumors in the head - Distal pancreatectomy for tumors in the body and
tail - Prognosis
- 3 months without treatment
- 10-20 months with Whipple
- Medical
- Combined 5-FU-based chemotherapy and radiation
therapy - Palliative (supportive) therapy
40Other Exocrine Tumors
- Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm (IPMN)
- Mucinous Cystic Neoplasm
- Microcystic Adenoma
- Solid-pseudopapillary Neoplasm
- Acinar Cell Carcinoma
- Pancreatoblastoma
- Not covered in Robbins
41Intraductal Papillary Mucinous Neoplasm (IPMN)
- Mucinous neoplasm that arises in and causes
cystic dilatation of the main (large) pancreatic
ducts - Can progress to invasive adenocarcinoma
42IPMN
43Mucinous Cystic Neoplasm
- Form unilocular or multilocular cysts
- Often within the tail of the pancreas
- No connection to the ductal system
- Usually occurs in women
- Can progress to invasive adenocarcinoma
44Mucinous Cystic Neoplasm
45Acinar Cell Carcinoma
- Tumor of the pancreatic acinar cells
- Not ductal-derived
46Pancreatoblastoma
- Really Really Really Really Really Rare.
- Occurs in children (lt10y)
47NeoplasiaTumors of the Endocrine Pancreas
48Islet Cell Tumors
- Rare (1-6 of pancreatic neoplasms)
- Mean age 58 years
- MF
- Risk factors
- Not many
- MEN I
49Islet Cell Tumors- Clinical Features
- Depends on functionality
- Functional (elaborate hormones into the blood)
- Insulinoma
- Gastrinoma
- Glucagonoma
- Somatostatinoma
- VIPoma
- Non-functional
- Often found incidentally
50Islet Cell Tumors - Pathology
- Gross Features
- Occur throughout pancreas
- Solid, soft, often well-circumscribed
- Cystic degeneration can occur
51Islet Cell Tumors - Pathology
- Microscopic features
- Small to medium uniform cells with round nuclei
- Even salt-and-pepper chromatin distribution
- Arranged in cords, acini, or solid sheets
- Insulinomas can have amyloid
- Somatostatinomas can have psammoma bodies
52Islet Cell Tumors - Pathology
- Immunohistochemistry
- Synaptophysin, chromogranin, NSE
- Hormones
53Islet Cell Tumors - Pathology
- Benign versus Malignant Yikes!
- All islet cell tumors should be considered
potentially malignant, but - Insulinomas tend to be benign
- Other hormone secreting tumors are more likely
malignant - Size lt2.0cm good prognosis gt3.0cm poor
prognosis - Also mitotic activity, vascular invasion,
necrosis. - Metastatic malignant
54Islet Cell Tumors - Management
- Surgical resection is the only curative treatment
- In patients with non-resectable tumors and/or
metastatic disease - Conservative Observation, medical management of
symptoms (since the course is usually long and
indolent) - In rapidly progressive disease octreotide
(somatostatin analogue), obliterative treatment
of hepatic mets
55Islet CellTumor- Gross
56Islet Cell Tumor- Micro
57Islet Cell Tumor - Micro
58Islet Cell Tumor - Micro