Adrenal gland
Adrenal gland is a little organ that hangs-out above the kidney. Pathologists rarely see it. It uncommonly is affected by tumours.
Anatomy & histology
Histology
Composed for cortex and medulla.
- Cortex has three layers - Mnemonic: GFR (from superficial to deep):
- Zona glomerulosa - salt (e.g. aldosterone)
- eosinophilic cytoplasm???
 - Normally discontinuous layer.
 
 - Zona fasciculata - sugar (e.g. cortisol)
- Clear cytoplasm - key feature.
 - Largest part of the cortex ~ 70%.
 - Cells in cords/nests???
 
 - Zona reticularis - steroid (e.g. dehydroepiandrosterone).
- Marked eosinophilia of cytoplasm - key feature.
 - Granular/reticular cytoplasm.
 
 
 - Zona glomerulosa - salt (e.g. aldosterone)
 - Medulla - produces NED: norepinephrine, epinephrine, dopamine.
 
Clinical
Patients getting a bilat. adrenalectomy get pre-treatment with steroids.[1]
Adrenal insuff. may be immediately post-op.[2]
Benign
Spironolactone bodies
Features:[3]
- Location: zona glomerulosa (where aldosterone is produced).
 - Appearance: eosinophilic spherical laminated whorls.
 - Etiology: long-term use of spironolactone.
 
Images:
Hemorrhagic adrenalitis
General
- AKA Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome.
 - Classically thought to be only due to Neisseria meningitidis; however, more recently also associated with Streptococcus aureus.[4][5]
 
Gross
Features:
- Massive haemorrhage within the substance of the adrenal gland.
 
DDx (autopsy):
- Post-mortem changes.
 
Microscopic
Features:
- Massive haemorrhage within the substance of the adrenal gland.
 
Image: Haemorrhage in adrenal (nih.gov).
Benign neoplasms
Adenomas
Radiology[6]
- Radiologists are good at identifying adenomas, as they are usually lipid rich and have a characteristic low HU signal.
 
Treatment is excision if...[7][8]
- Lesions >30 mm.
 - Hormonally active.
 - Non-incidental finding. (???)
 
Hyperplasia vs. adenoma
- Hyperplasia is multifocal.[9]
 
Adrenal cortical adenoma
Epidemiology
- Often an incidental finding.
 
Pathologic/clinical:
- May be hormonally active.
 
Histology
Classic features:
- Well-defined cell borders.
 - Clear cytoplasm.
 - May have foci of necrosis/degeneration and nuclear atypia.
 
In aldosterone producing tumours:
- May extend outside of the capsule (should not be diagnosed as adrenal cortical carcinoma.
 - No atrophy of non-hyperplastic cortex.
 
In cortisol producing tumours:
- Atrophy of the non-hyperplastic cortex (due to feedback inhibition from the pituitary gland).
 
Pheochromocytoma
General
- Considered to be a paraganglioma.[10]
 
Clinical
- Paroxysms (i.e. episodic) tachycardia, headache, anxiety.
 
Epidemiology
- Tumour arises from medulla
 - Literally means "dusky" (pheo) "colour" (chromo) - dull appearance on gross
 
Histology
Features:
- Architecture:
- Cell nests, auf deutsch: Zellballen (literally Cell balls).
- Useful for differentiating from ACC.
 
 
 - Cell nests, auf deutsch: Zellballen (literally Cell balls).
 - Nuclei.
- +/-Pleomorphism.
 - Nucleoli may be prominent (not signif. prognostically).
 
 - Cellular morphology.
- Polygonal cells.
 
 - Cytoplasm.
- Basophilic, granular.
 
 - Other.
- Haemorrhagic.
 
 
Ganglioneuroma
Microscopic
Features:
- Ganglion cells - key feature.
- Large cells with large nucleus.
- Prominent nucleolus.
 
 
 - Large cells with large nucleus.
 - Disordered fibrinous material.
 
Images:
See: CNS tumours.
Myelolipoma
Adenomatoid tumour
See: Adenomatoid tumours (uterine tumours).
Malignant neoplasms
Adrenocortical carcinoma
- AKA adrenal cortical carcinoma.
 - Abbreviated ACC.
 
General
- Prognosis sucks.
 
Gross
- +/-Encapsulated.
 - Necrotic-appearing.
 
Image:
Microscopic
Various criteria exist for this diagnosis. The most widely used is the Weiss criteria, which is a big long clunker.
Image:
Notes:
- Tumour may contain fat.[11]
 
Adult
Weiss criteria
Three of the following:[12]
- High nuclear grade.
 - High mitotic rate; >5/50 HPF (@ 40X obj.) - definition suffers from HPFitis.
 - Atypical mitoses.
 - Cleared cytoplasm in >= 25% of tumour cells.
 - Sheeting (diffuse architecture) in >= 1/3 of tumour cells.
 - Necrosis in nests.
 - Venous invasion.
 - Adrenal sinusoid invasion; lymphovascular space invasion within the adrenal gland.
 - Capsular invasion.
 
Volante criteria
There is a simplified set of criteria by Volante et al. - that is not widely used:[13]
- Reticular network disruption (with reticulin staining).
 - One of the three following:
- Abundant mitoses >5/50 high-power fields - definition suffers from HPFitis.
 - Necrosis.
 - Vascular invasion.
 
 
Pediatric
The criteria in the pediatric setting are somewhat different. This is discussed by Wieneke et al.[14] and Dehner and Hill.[15]
Dehner and Hill propose a very simple system:[15]
- "Low risk" < 200 g & confined to the adrenal.
 - "Intermediate risk" 200-400 g, no mets, +/-microscopic disease outside adrenal.
 - "High risk" >400 g, or mets, or gross invasion of adjacent structures.
 
IHC
- Vimentin +ve.
 - Melan A +ve.
 - Inhibin-alpha +ve.
 - Cytokeratins +ve/-ve.
 
Others:
- Synaptophysin +ve/-ve.
 - Chromograin -ve.
- Pheochromocytoma +ve.
 
 - EMA -ve.
- Renal cell carcinoma +ve.
 
 
Malignant pheochromoctyoma
- Like the description in benign neoplasms.
 - Differentiated from benign pheochromocytoma by mets - often aided by radiologic report.
 - Features useful for differentiating benign from malignant:[16]
- Marked nuclear atypia.
 - Invasion:
- Capsular.
 - Vascular.
 
 - Necrosis.
 - Cellular monotony.
 - Mitoses:
- Rate.
 - Atypical mitosis.
 
 
 
Neuroblastoma
General
- Clinical: increased urine homovanillic acid.
 
Epidemiology:
- Usually paediatric population.
 
Microscopic
Features:[17]
- Small round blue cells separated by thin (pink) fibrous septa.
 - Homer-Wright rosettes.
- Rosette with a small (~100 micrometers - diameter) meshwork of fibers (neuropil) at the centre.[18]
 
 
Notes:
- The fibrous septa are esp. useful for differentiation from lymphoma.
 
DDx:
Subtypes
- Several subtypes exist.[19]
 
Images:
See also
References
- ↑ URL: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/119909358/PDFSTART. Accessed on: 21 August 2010.
 - ↑ URL: http://ats.ctsnetjournals.org/cgi/content/full/62/5/1516. Accessed on: 21 August 2010.
 - ↑ Kovacs K, Horvath E, Singer W (December 1973). "Fine structure and morphogenesis of spironolactone bodies in the zona glomerulosa of the human adrenal cortex". J. Clin. Pathol. 26 (12): 949-57. PMC 477936. PMID 4131694. http://jcp.bmj.com/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=4131694.
 - ↑ Adem PV, Montgomery CP, Husain AN, et al. (September 2005). "Staphylococcus aureus sepsis and the Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome in children". N. Engl. J. Med. 353 (12): 1245–51. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa044194. PMID 16177250.
 - ↑ Hamilton D, Harris MD, Foweraker J, Gresham GA (February 2004). "Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome as a result of non-meningococcal infection". J. Clin. Pathol. 57 (2): 208–9. PMC 1770213. PMID 14747454. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1770213/.
 - ↑ URL: http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/376240-overview.
 - ↑ Luton, JP.; Martinez, M.; Coste, J.; Bertherat, J. (Jul 2000). "Outcome in patients with adrenal incidentaloma selected for surgery: an analysis of 88 cases investigated in a single clinical center.". Eur J Endocrinol 143 (1): 111-7. PMID 10870039.
 - ↑ Liu, XK.; Liu, XJ.; Dong, X.; Kong, CZ. (Jun 2008). "[Clinical research about treatment for adrenal incidentalomas]". Zhonghua Wai Ke Za Zhi 46 (11): 832-4. PMID 19035218.
 - ↑ IAV. 18 February 2009.
 - ↑ Thompson, Lester D. R. (2006). Endocrine Pathology: A Volume in Foundations in Diagnostic Pathology Series (1st ed.). Churchill Livingstone. pp. 327. ISBN 978-0443066856.
 - ↑ Heye S, Woestenborghs H, Van Kerkhove F, Oyen R (2005). "Adrenocortical carcinoma with fat inclusion: case report". Abdom Imaging 30 (5): 641–3. doi:10.1007/s00261-004-0281-5. PMID 15688105.
 - ↑ Jain M, Kapoor S, Mishra A, Gupta S, Agarwal A (2010). "Weiss criteria in large adrenocortical tumors: a validation study". Indian J Pathol Microbiol 53 (2): 222–6. doi:10.4103/0377-4929.64325. PMID 20551521.
 - ↑ Volante M, Bollito E, Sperone P, et al. (November 2009). "Clinicopathological study of a series of 92 adrenocortical carcinomas: from a proposal of simplified diagnostic algorithm to prognostic stratification". Histopathology 55 (5): 535–43. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2559.2009.03423.x. PMID 19912359.
 - ↑ Wieneke JA, Thompson LD, Heffess CS (July 2003). "Adrenal cortical neoplasms in the pediatric population: a clinicopathologic and immunophenotypic analysis of 83 patients". Am. J. Surg. Pathol. 27 (7): 867–81. PMID 12826878.
 - ↑ 15.0 15.1 Dehner LP, Hill DA (2009). "Adrenal cortical neoplasms in children: why so many carcinomas and yet so many survivors?". Pediatr. Dev. Pathol. 12 (4): 284–91. doi:10.2350/08-06-0489.1. PMID 19326954.
 - ↑ Thompson, Lester D. R. (2006). Endocrine Pathology: A Volume in Foundations in Diagnostic Pathology Series (1st ed.). Churchill Livingstone. pp. 259. ISBN 978-0443066856.
 - ↑ Chung EM, Murphey MD, Specht CS, Cube R, Smirniotopoulos JG (2008). "From the Archives of the AFIP. Pediatric orbit tumors and tumorlike lesions: osseous lesions of the orbit". Radiographics 28 (4): 1193–214. doi:10.1148/rg.284085013. PMID 18635637.
 - ↑ Wippold FJ, Perry A (March 2006). "Neuropathology for the neuroradiologist: rosettes and pseudorosettes". AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 27 (3): 488–92. PMID 16551982.
 - ↑ Shimada H, Ambros IM, Dehner LP, Hata J, Joshi VV, Roald B (July 1999). "Terminology and morphologic criteria of neuroblastic tumors: recommendations by the International Neuroblastoma Pathology Committee". Cancer 86 (2): 349–63. PMID 10421272.
 - ↑ URL: http://radiographics.rsna.org/content/28/4/1193.full. Accessed on: 12 January 2011.