Melocchi Laura, Rossi Giulio, Valli Mirca, Mengoli Maria Cecilia, Mondoni Michele, Lazzari-Agli Luigi, Santandrea Giacomo, Davoli Fabio, Baldovini Chiara, Cavazza Alberto, Colby Thomas V
Pathology Unit, Department of Oncology, Fondazione Poliambulanza Hospital Institute, 25124 Brescia, Italy.
Operative Unit of Pathologic Anatomy, Ospedale Infermi, Azienda USL Romagna, 47900 Rimini, Italy.
Diagnostics (Basel). 2023 Feb 20;13(4):802. doi: 10.3390/diagnostics13040802.
Pulmonary minute meningothelial-like nodules (MMNs) are common incidental findings in surgical specimens, consisting of tiny proliferation (usually no larger than 5-6 mm) of bland-looking meningothelial cells showing a perivenular and interstitial distribution, sharing morphologic, ultrastructural, and immunohistochemical profiles with meningiomas. The identification of multiple bilateral MMNs leading to an interstitial lung disease characterized by diffuse and micronodular/miliariform patterns radiologically allows the diagnosis of diffuse pulmonary meningotheliomatosis (DPM). Nevertheless, the lung is the most common site of metastatic primary intracranial meningioma, and differential diagnosis with DPM may be impossible without clinic-radiologic integration. Herein, we report four cases (three females; mean age, 57.5 years) fitting the criteria of DPM, all incidentally discovered and histologically evidenced on transbronchial biopsy (2) and surgical resection (2). All cases showed immunohistochemical expression of epithelial membrane antigen (EMA), progesterone receptor, and CD56. Notably, three of these patients had a proven or radiologically suspected intracranial meningioma; in two cases, it was discovered before, and in one case, after the diagnosis of DPM. An extensive literature review (44 patients with DPM) revealed similar cases with imaging studies excluding intracranial meningioma in only 9% (4 of 44 cases studied). The diagnosis of DPM requires close correlation with the clinic-radiologic data since a subset of cases coexist with or follow a previously diagnosed intracranial meningioma and, thus, may represent incidental and indolent metastatic deposits of meningioma.
肺微小脑膜上皮样结节(MMNs)是手术标本中常见的偶然发现,由外观温和的脑膜上皮细胞微小增殖(通常不超过5 - 6毫米)组成,呈静脉周围和间质分布,在形态学、超微结构和免疫组织化学特征上与脑膜瘤相似。双侧多发MMNs经影像学检查发现导致以弥漫性微结节/粟粒状模式为特征的间质性肺疾病,可诊断为弥漫性肺脑膜瘤病(DPM)。然而,肺是原发性颅内脑膜瘤转移最常见的部位,若无临床 - 影像学综合判断,与DPM的鉴别诊断可能无法进行。在此,我们报告4例符合DPM标准的病例(3名女性;平均年龄57.5岁),均为偶然发现,经支气管活检(2例)和手术切除(2例)进行组织学证实。所有病例均显示上皮膜抗原(EMA)、孕激素受体和CD56的免疫组织化学表达。值得注意的是,其中3例患者有经证实或影像学怀疑的颅内脑膜瘤;2例在诊断DPM之前发现,1例在诊断DPM之后发现。一项广泛的文献综述(44例DPM患者)显示,仅有9%(44例研究病例中的4例)的影像学研究排除了颅内脑膜瘤的类似病例。DPM的诊断需要与临床 - 影像学数据密切相关,因为一部分病例与先前诊断的颅内脑膜瘤共存或在其后出现,因此可能代表脑膜瘤偶然且惰性的转移灶。