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Published in: Virchows Archiv 2/2012

01-08-2012 | Letter to the Editor

Intestinal metaplasia and colonization of endometriosis in a case of an appendiceal mucinous neoplasm

Authors: Louis Libbrecht, Christophe Snauwaert, Martine De Vos, Karel Geboes, Claude Cuvelier, Liesbeth Ferdinande

Published in: Virchows Archiv | Issue 2/2012

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Excerpt

Intestinal endometriosis is reported in 15–37 % of patients with pelvic endometriosis [1]. Making a correct diagnosis can be challenging for clinicians as well as for pathologists as this disease is able to mimic other pathologies such as inflammatory bowel disease, infectious etiologies, or neoplasms. The appendix is less commonly involved than the small or large intestine. Endometriosis of the appendix is often asymptomatic and discovered as an incidental finding, but it may also present as an acute or chronic appendicitis, occasionally with the formation of an inflammatory mass, mimicking a neoplasm [1]. A few case reports describe the development of obstructive mucocoeles secondary to endometriosis of the appendix. These mucin-filled cystic dilatations of the appendix were lined by normal epithelium without hyperplastic or neoplastic changes [2]. We report the case of an appendiceal mucinous neoplasm in association with endometriosis in a 48-year-old woman. The appendiceal lesion was an incidental finding in this patient who underwent imaging for an episode of pancreatitis. Surgery was performed. Microscopic examination demonstrated that the cystic lesion was covered by a mucosa with serrated and dilated crypts that assumed L- and inverted T-shapes (Fig. 1). The crypts were lined by columnar epithelial cells with low-grade atypia. With the presence of extra-appendiceal acellular mucin, this lead to the diagnosis of a low-grade mucinous neoplasm with low risk of recurrence [3]. In addition, the wall of the appendix showed numerous foci of endometriosis consisting of endometrial glands embedded in variable amounts of endometrial stroma, confirmed with ER and CD10 immunohistochemistry (not shown). Interestingly, some of the glandular structures that were embedded in the endometrial stroma were lined by mucinous epithelium, very similar to the epithelium observed in the appendiceal mucinous neoplasm. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated CK7 expression in the normal endometrial epithelium and CK20 expression in the mucinous epithelium. Two theories could explain this finding.
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Metadata
Title
Intestinal metaplasia and colonization of endometriosis in a case of an appendiceal mucinous neoplasm
Authors
Louis Libbrecht
Christophe Snauwaert
Martine De Vos
Karel Geboes
Claude Cuvelier
Liesbeth Ferdinande
Publication date
01-08-2012
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Virchows Archiv / Issue 2/2012
Print ISSN: 0945-6317
Electronic ISSN: 1432-2307
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00428-012-1264-5

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