Department of Pathology, University Health Network, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Pathology. 2013 Apr;45(3):316-30. doi: 10.1097/PAT.0b013e32835f45c5.
The concept of precursor lesions of endocrine neoplasms is a new and interesting topic in endocrine pathology. A variety of clinicopathological conditions are associated with a sequence of cellular changes from hyperplasia to neoplasia; dysplasia is, in contrast, quite rare. The majority of precursor lesions is associated with familial genetic syndromes. These include C-cell hyperplasia in thyroid that is associated with familial medullary thyroid carcinoma, adrenal medullary hyperplasia as a precursor of phaeochromocytomas in MEN2 syndrome, rare pituitary adenohypophyseal cell hyperplasia in familial syndromes associated with pituitary adenomas, MEN1-related precursor gastric enterochromaffin-like cell (ECL) hyperplasia, and duodenal gastrin producing (G) and/or somatostatin producing (D) cell hyperplasia that give rise to type II gastric neuroendocrine tumours (NETs) and duodenal NETs, respectively, and MEN1- or VHL-related islet hyperplasia, islet dysplasia and ductulo-insular complexes that are associated with pancreatic NETs. Other hyperplasias are not thought to be associated with genetic predisposition. Some are attributed to inflammation; autoimmune chronic atrophic gastritis-related ECL hyperplasia can progress to type I gastric NETs, and EC (enterochromaffin) cell or L cell hyperplasia associated with inflammatory bowel diseases can progress to colorectal NETs. In the lung, diffuse idiopathic pulmonary neuroendocrine cell hyperplasia can give rise to peripherally-located low grade pulmonary NETs and tumourlets (neuroendocrine microtumours <5 mm). Rarely, secondary hyperplasias develop into autonomous neoplasms, as in tertiary hyperparathyroidism or pituitary thyrotroph adenomas in primary hypothyroidism. While some precursor lesions, such as thyroid C cell hyperplasia, represent frankly premalignant conditions, others may represent a sequence of proliferative changes from hyperplasia to benign neoplasia that may also progress to malignancy.
内分泌肿瘤前病变的概念是内分泌病理学中的一个新的有趣课题。各种临床病理情况都与从增生到肿瘤的一系列细胞变化有关;相比之下,发育不良则相当罕见。大多数前病变与家族遗传综合征有关。这些包括与家族性甲状腺髓样癌相关的甲状腺 C 细胞增生、MEN2 综合征中嗜铬细胞瘤的肾上腺髓质增生、与垂体瘤相关的家族性综合征中的罕见垂体腺垂体细胞增生、与 MEN1 相关的胃肠嗜铬样细胞 (ECL) 前体增生、以及导致 II 型胃神经内分泌肿瘤 (NET) 和十二指肠 NET 的胃泌素产生 (G) 和/或生长抑素产生 (D) 细胞增生,以及 MEN1 或 VHL 相关的胰岛增生、胰岛发育不良和导管-胰岛复合物,它们与胰腺 NET 有关。其他增生被认为与遗传易感性无关。有些归因于炎症;自身免疫性慢性萎缩性胃炎相关的 ECL 增生可进展为 I 型胃 NET,与炎症性肠病相关的 EC(肠嗜铬)细胞或 L 细胞增生可进展为结直肠 NET。在肺部,弥漫性特发性肺神经内分泌细胞增生可导致位于周围的低度肺 NET 和瘤样病变(神经内分泌微肿瘤 <5 毫米)。罕见情况下,继发性增生发展为自主性肿瘤,如在原发性甲状腺功能减退中的三发性甲状旁腺功能亢进或垂体促甲状腺瘤。虽然一些前病变,如甲状腺 C 细胞增生,代表明显的癌前状况,但其他前病变可能代表从增生到良性肿瘤的增殖变化序列,也可能进展为恶性肿瘤。