Partridge Justin C, Cipriani Nicole, Faquin William C, Chuang Sung K, Keith David A, Lahey Edward Thomas
Research Student, Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; DMD Candidate, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, Boston, MA.
Former Fellow, Department of Pathology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Assistant Professor of Pathology, The University of Chicago Medicine and Biological Sciences, Chicago, IL.
J Oral Maxillofac Surg. 2016 Jul;74(7):1396-402. doi: 10.1016/j.joms.2016.01.036. Epub 2016 Jan 28.
Differentiating between ganglion and synovial cysts by standard histology is difficult, leading to inaccurate statements on frequency for each of these periarticular lesions. The purpose of this study was to use immunohistochemical (IHC) analysis to 1) calculate the accuracy of the histologic diagnoses, 2) determine the frequency of ganglion and synovial cysts of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ), and 3) compare the frequency of these lesions in the TMJ compared with the extracranial skeleton in patients treated at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH).
This is a retrospective cohort study of all patients undergoing treatment of TMJ cysts at MGH from 2001 through 2013. IHC analysis of tissue samples for each patient was completed and compared with the original histologic diagnoses. Categorical variables, including age, gender, and sidedness, were recorded. A natural language search of the MGH Department of Pathology database determined the frequency of extracranial periarticular cysts during the same period.
Thirteen patients met the inclusion criteria. Eleven cysts were synovial and 2 were ganglion based on histology. IHC analysis identified 2 false-positive synovial cyst diagnoses, resulting in 100% sensitivity and 50% specificity for the original histologic assessment and a percentage error of 22%. Of the periarticular TMJ lesions, 69% were synovial cysts and 31% were ganglion cysts. The frequency of TMJ versus extracranial ganglion cysts was 0.24%, and the frequency of TMJ versus extracranial synovial cysts was 0.60% based on 3,176 extracranial cysts (1,506 synovial; 1,670 ganglion).
This study represents the largest single-institution experience with periarticular cysts of the TMJ, and contrary to previous reports, TMJ cysts appear to be more frequently synovial than ganglion. IHC can be used to overcome the relatively poor specificity of histologic diagnosis of synovial cysts.
通过标准组织学方法区分腱鞘囊肿和滑膜囊肿很困难,这导致对这些关节周围病变的发生率的陈述不准确。本研究的目的是使用免疫组织化学(IHC)分析来:1)计算组织学诊断的准确性;2)确定颞下颌关节(TMJ)腱鞘囊肿和滑膜囊肿的发生率;3)比较在马萨诸塞州总医院(MGH)接受治疗的患者中,TMJ与颅外骨骼中这些病变的发生率。
这是一项对2001年至2013年期间在MGH接受TMJ囊肿治疗的所有患者进行的回顾性队列研究。完成了对每位患者组织样本的IHC分析,并与原始组织学诊断进行比较。记录了包括年龄、性别和病变侧别等分类变量。通过对MGH病理科数据库进行自然语言搜索,确定了同期颅外关节周围囊肿的发生率。
13例患者符合纳入标准。基于组织学,11个囊肿为滑膜囊肿,2个为腱鞘囊肿。IHC分析发现2例假阳性滑膜囊肿诊断,导致原始组织学评估的敏感性为100%,特异性为50%,百分比误差为22%。在TMJ关节周围病变中,69%为滑膜囊肿,31%为腱鞘囊肿。基于3176个颅外囊肿(1506个滑膜囊肿;1670个腱鞘囊肿),TMJ腱鞘囊肿与颅外腱鞘囊肿的发生率为0.24%,TMJ滑膜囊肿与颅外滑膜囊肿的发生率为0.60%。
本研究代表了关于TMJ关节周围囊肿的最大规模单机构经验,与先前报道相反,TMJ囊肿似乎滑膜囊肿比腱鞘囊肿更常见。IHC可用于克服滑膜囊肿组织学诊断相对较差的特异性。