3. CUTANEOUS ADNEXAL TUMORS
• Cutaneous adnexal tumors are a large and diverse group of
tumors that are commonly classified according to their state of
appendageal differentiation: eccrine, apocrine, follicular, and
sebaceous.
• These tumors generally behave in a benign manner, but
malignant types exist
4. EPIDEMIOLOGY
• Epidemiology
• Most studies on adnexal neoplasms have taken place in western
countries with Caucasian populations.
• Benign adnexal neoplasms tend to occur in younger patients than
carcinomas do.
5. HANDLING SKIN ADNEXAL
TUMOURS
• The specimen should be thoroughly sampled after painting its
resection margins
• The lesion should be serially sectioned at 0.3–0.5-cm intervals
and submitted in its entirety for histological examination.
6. • Sections including tumoral and grossly uninvolved
surrounding tissue are relevant to evaluate the growth
pattern of the tumour.
• A small/ superficial biopsy may preclude accurate diagnosis of
skin adnexal lesions, and is therefore not advised
7. SKIN APPENDAGES
• Skin appendages are derived from the ectoderm, and start to
develop early during the embryological life.
• During the fourth week of development, a single-cell-thick
ectoderm and underlying mesoderm begin to proliferate, and
differentiate towards various structures, including skin
appendages.
8.
9. SPECIAL STAINS
• Periodic acid Schiff (PAS) stain, with and without diastase-
cytoplasmic glycogen contents and stromal hyalinised
basement membrane
• Hale’s colloidal iron stain for acid mucin - stromal mucinous
degeneration
• Prussian blue may be useful in demonstrating iron deposits
within apocrine lesions.
10. IHC
• Monoclonal CEA and EMA - in tumours with ductal
differentiation.
• EMA - in tumours with sebaceous differentiation.
• GCDFP-15 and androgen receptors - in apocrine lesions
• Oestrogen and progesterone receptors - in different sweat
glands lesions and are not considered specific
11. • Is it a benign or malignant neoplasm?
• Is it a primary adnexal neoplasm or cutaneous metastasis of
internal malignancy?
• Is it the cutaneous expression of a syndrome assiciated with
an internal malignancy?
12. BENIGN MALIGNANT
Orientation to skin surface Vertically oriented Horizontally oriented
Symmetry and borders Symmetrical with smooth
borders
Infiltrating borders
Cell aggregates Uniform aggregates of
cells
Irregular aggregates of
cells
Necrosis No necrosis en
mass(except poroma)
Necrosis en mass
Cytology and mitoses Monomorphous cells with
variable typical mitoses
Pleomorphic cells with
atypical mitoses
Stroma Dense fibrotic stroma Infiltration into dermis
and subcutis with scant
myxoid stroma
13. PRIMARY CUTANEOUS METASTATIC FROM INTERNAL
MALIGANCY
Connection to epidermis Deep dermis/subcutaneous tissue
Growth into skin appendages Multifocality
Benign counterpart within the lesion
with entrapped melanocytes
Lymphovascular invasion
14.
15. CLINICAL PRESENTATION
• Skin appendage neoplasms present as papules (‘‘bumps’’) on
the skin that are difficult to distinguish clinically from one
another.
• They can be solitary or multiple.
• Typically multiple when they are associated with an inherited
syndrome.
16. • Most common presentation - facial papules.
• Clustering on the central facial areas of the nose, nasolabial
folds, upper lip, and forehead.
• Gold standard in diagnosis – histopathological examination of
a skin biopsy
17. • A 49-year-old man - 10-year history of numerous skin-colored
papules on the mid-face as well as 3 large pedunculated
nodules over the scalp.
• The patient's mother had a history of multiple basal cell
carcinomas (BCC).
• On examination- three 2-3 cm pink, hairless, pedunculated
nodules were present over the scalp and left preauricular
area.
18. • A well-circumscribed and
symmetric lesion
• Predominantly uniform
basaloid cells with peripheral
palisading, arranged in
variably sized nests and
trabeculae
• Dense stroma that contains
fibroblasts
19. • Basaloid- The cells resemble cells from the basal epidermal
layer i.e. have a dark oval nucleus and little cytoplasm
20.
21.
22. TRICHOEPITHELIOMA
• Benign follicular appendage tumors with differentiation to all
three segments of the hair follicle but in which trichogenesis
is present, incomplete or abortive.
• The epithelial structures - islands of basaloid cells and horn
cysts, which are basically abortive attempts at pilar
differentiation.
• The stromal elements - fibrous stroma that envelopes the
epithelial elements (Rosai, Basam).
24. • Hair follicles are tubular invaginations of the epidermis, that
develop as downgrowths of the epidermis into the dermis
25.
26. • The hair follicle -
anatomically divided into an
upper, middle, and lower
region.
• The infundibulum, the
isthmus, and the inferior
segment
27. THE HAIR FOLLICLE
• The hair follicle consists (from inside out) of the following
concentric layers:
• The hair shaft (HS)
• The inner root sheath (IRS)
• The outer root sheath (ORS)
• The perifollicular dermal sheath
28.
29.
30. Starting from the outside: the cuticle which consists of several layers,
the cortex, which contains the keratin bundles in cell structures that remain roughly rod-
like; and in some cases medulla, a disorganized and open area at the fiber's center.
31. • The dermal papilla consists
of an egg-shaped
accumulation of
mesenchymal cells
surrounded by ground
substance
• The cells of the hair matrix
have vesicular nuclei and
deeply basophilic cytoplasm
32. CLUES TO FOLLICULAR
DIFFERENTIATION IN ADNEXAL
TUMOURS
• Proliferation of basaloid germinative cells
• peripheral nuclear palisading
• Adjacent papillary mesenchymal cells.
• Matrical shadow (ghost) cells
• Trichilemmal keratinisation
• Tumour is attached to normal follicular structures.
33. • Differentiation towards many of the normal follicular
elements - generally named accordingly.
• Classifed depending on which part of the hair follicle the
lesion differentiates toward or most closely resembles.
36. HAIR GERM TUMOURS
• A ‘group of benign cutaneous neoplasms in which hair follicle
development may be partly or completely recapitulated’
• The epithelial component is equivalent to the hair germ.
• The mesenchymal component is equivalent to the dermal
papilla
37. A hair follicle
primordium (called
the hair germ)
forms as a cell
aggregate in the
basal layer of the
epidermis during
development
38. • The papilla is a large
structure at the base of the
hair follicle.
• Connective tissue and a
capillary loop
42. PAPILLARY-MESENCHYMAL
BODIES
• Unique histologic feature- papillary-mesenchymal bodies,
which are cup-like proliferations of basaloid cells engulfing
fibroblasts, thus recapitulating papillae of hair follicles
(Basam).
• Bulbar differentiation- emulating the follicular bulb and
papilla
43.
44.
45.
46.
47. • Basal-cell carcinomas - folliculo-
sebaceous-apocrine germ, also
known as the trichoblast..
• Red or pink papules with raised,
rolled borders and pearly, waxy,
or translucent appearance.
• Noduloulcerative BCCs have
indurated edges and central
painless ulcerations that are
covered with crust: “rodent ulcers.
48. • well-defined, smooth-bordered
basophilic staining islands
• basaloid cells that show
pronounced peripheral palisading
of nuclei.
• Retraction artifacts due to
stromal shrinkage in the form of
clefts around the tumor islands
• surrounding stroma with a high
content of mucin
49. • large homogenous, oval,
elongated nuclei with scant
cytoplasm.
• high nuclear-to-cytoplasmic
ratio,
• Rare atypical mitoses.
• Necrotic cells and necrosis
en masse
54. TUMOURS WITH PREDOMINANT
SMALL/
BASALOID ELEMENTS
• Trichoblastoma/trichoepithelioma
• Pilomatricoma
• Sebaceous tumours
• Poroma
• Spiradenoma
• Acrospiroma
• Cylindroma
• This pattern should be interpreted in conjunction with other features
such as sebaceous or follicular differentiation, the presence of
cysts/ductal elements or clear cell change, etc
55. • The hair matrix -
proliferating cells that
generate the hair and the
internal root sheath just
above the dermal papilla.
• Cells in the hair matrix
proliferate and move
upwards, gradually
becoming keratinised to
produce the hair.
56. • Melanocytes are present
between the basal cells of
the matrix.
• The matrix cells
differentiate into the
multiple components of the
hair follicle, including the
hair shaft (HS), the inner
root sheath (IRS), and the
outer root sheath (ORS).
58. PILOMATRIXOMA
• Benign tumor arising from hair matrix
• Children and young adults - head, neck or upper extremities
• Associated with Gardner's syndrome, Myotonic dystrophy,
Steinert's disease, Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome, Turner's
syndrome and sarcoidosis.
60. Matrix cell specialization –
• Toward hair cortex with a formation of dense translucent
hyaline substance closely resembling hard keratin
• Towards large squamoid keratinocytes with prominent
keratohyaline granules suggestive of inner sheath cells.
61. A transition from basaloid to ghost cells
is seen in most areas which may be
abrupt or gradual
62. The shadow cells are formed due to
keratinization of basaloid cells and
tend to increase in number as the
neoplasm ages.
63. PROLIFERATING
PILOMATRIXOMA:
• Basaloid cells show variable nuclear atypia and mitotic
figures
Carcinoma
• asymmetry and poor circumscription, ,markedly sized and
variably shaped basaloid aggregations, and ulceration.
• prominent nucleoli and frequent atypical mitoses and
infiltration into the adjacent tissues.
65. THE INNER ROOT SHEATH
• The inner root sheath (IRS) surrounds the hair shaft.
• It exists only in the inferior segment of the hair follicle
travelling from the bulb up to the beginning of the isthmus
• The IRS is also made up of three layers: a) the IRS cuticle b)
Huxley’s layer and c) Henley’s layer
66.
67. OUTER ROOT SHEATH
• Outer root sheath - The outer root sheath (ORS) surrounds
the IRS and consists of multiple layers of epithelial cuboidal
cells containing large quantities of glycogen.
• The thin, clear basement membrane between the inner fibrous
layer of a hair follicle and its outer root sheath.
72. • Glycogenated clear epithelial cells
with peripheral palisading in
deeper parts ; cells are PAS-
diastase positive ;
• Broad connection with overlying
surface epithelium
• epidermal changes resembling
verruca vulgaris present in some
cases
73. DIAGNOSTIC FEATURE OF
TRICHILEMMOMA:
• Evidence of outer root sheath differentiation characterized
by -
• 1. Bland epithelial cells showing peripheral palisading
• 2. Clear cytoplasm
• 3. Prominent intercellular borders
• 4. Thickened and eosinophilic, PAS- positive basement
membrane.
74. • Cowden disease (multiple hamartoma syndrome) causes
hamartomatous neoplasms of the skin and mucosa, GI tract,
bones, CNS, eyes, and genitourinary tract.
• Skin is involved in 90-100% of cases, and the thyroid is involved
in 66% of cases.
• Mucocutaneous features of Cowden disease (multiple hamartoma
syndrome) include trichilemmomas, oral mucosal papillomatosis,
acral keratoses, and palmoplantar keratoses.
75. • The lesions on the
extremities - hyperkeratotic
verrucous papules
76. • Gingival mucosae - multiple
firm whitish papules which
coalesced to give a cobble
stone appearance suggestive
of mucosal fibromas.
• Palmo plantar punctate
keratosis with central
depression and cutaneous
horn on the nape of the neck
77. Major criteria
• Breast cancer
• Thyroid carcinoma,
especially follicular thyroid
carcinoma
• Macrocephaly (>97
percentile)
• Lhermitte-Duclos disease
• Endometrial cancer
• Minor criteria
• Other thyroid lesions (eg, adenoma, multinodular
goiter)
• Mental retardation (intelligence quotient < 75)
• GI hamartomas
• Fibrocystic disease of the breast
• Lipomas
• Fibromas
• Genitourinary tumors (eg, uterine fibroids, renal cell
carcinoma) or malformations
78. TUMOURS WITH CLEAR CELL
CHANGE
• Trichilemmoma
Clear cell change is indicative of trichilemmal differentiation in
follicular lesions
• Poroma and porocarcinoma
Clear cells are glycogen rich and PAS positive
• Hidradenoma
• Clear cell change and adjacent thickened BM is indicative of
trichilemmal differentiation in follicular lesions
79. TRICHILEMMAL CARCINOMA
• Tumour lobules infiltrating with a pushing border
• Immunocytochemistry reveals positivity for cytokeratin and
negativity for CEA and EMA.
80.
81. PROLIFERTING TRICHILEMMAL
(PILAR) CYSTS
• Trichilemmal (pilar) cysts - common skin lesions on the scalp
of elderly women.
• Proliferating trichilemmal tumour arises from the isthmus
region of the outer root sheath.
82. • The isthmus is the
shortened segment of the
hair follicle, extending from
the attachment of the
erector pili muscle (bulge
region) into the entrance of
the sebaceous gland duct.
83. • No keratinisation below the level of isthmus as ORS covered
by IRS
• However, at the level of the isthmus where the IRS
disintegrates, the ORS keratinizes without forming granules
(trichilemmal keratinization), which is similar to the
keratinization of the hair cortex.
84. • Well defined lobulated, solid
and cystic mass of
proliferating epithelium,
• thick hyalinised basement
membrane
85. • Extension of epithelial
growths into the lumen,
central trichilemmal
keratinisation, and
peripheral palisading of
small basaloid cells
86. • Trichilemmal keratinisation-without granular layer-Pilar
tumour
• Trichilemmal keratinization – gain in the bulk and vertical
diameter of the cells, which generally lose their nuclei and
keratinize without the formation of keratohyaline granules.
88. • The infundibular tumors - above the opening of the sebaceous
duct
Dilated pore of Winer and the trichoadenoma
• Isthmic tumors - origin of the sebaceous duct to the level of the
bulge.
Tumor of the follicular infundibulum) and the pilar sheath
acanthoma.
• Hair follicle infundibulum- Keratinous cystic structures
89.
90. TRICHOADENOMA OF
NIKOLOWSKI
• Rare, benign, well differentiated, slowly growing tumour with
differentiation towards infundibular portion of the hair follicle
which was first described in 1958 by Nikolowski.
• Site: Face & buttocks. Clinically presents as a solitary
papule/nodule.
91.
92. NUMEROUS HORN CYST IN THE DERMIS. CYST
LINED BY EOSINOPHILIC CELLS , CONTAIN
KERATIN.
93.
94. FOLLICULAR MESENCHYMAL
DIFFERENTIATION
• Prominent component of perifollicular mesenchyme, but follicular
elements are also present.
• Trichodiscoma ; Fibrofolliculoma
• Perifollicular fibroma
• Neurofollicular hamartoma
95. • Spectrum of neoplasms combining a follicular element and the
specialized periadventitial dermis of the upper portion of the
hair follicle.
• Fibrofolliculoma-Predominance of epithelial component
• Trichodiscoma- Predominance of connective component ,
CD34+
96. • Fibrofolliculoma - very rare benign tumor of the skin that is
derived from the perifollicular sheath.
• Trichodiscoma is a small hamartomatous tumor of the hair
disk with a proliferation of the fibrovascular component of the
hair
• Histologically, they show a mixed proliferation of the external
root sheath of the hair follicles and the surrounding fibrous
tissue
97. • A well-formed central hair
follicle with a dilated
infundibulum containing
laminated keratin
• Anastomosing epithelial
strands that radiate from
the central hair follicle into
the perifollicular fibrotic
stroma
99. • Horizontally oriented dome
shaped tumour with more
mesenchymal than epithelial
element
• Prominent stroma of
elliptical shape
• Lobules of sebaceous glands
at end of prominent stroma
• Increased dilated capillaries
with perivascular fibrosis
100. • Multiple fibrofolliculomas- Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome (BHDS)
that presents with cutaneous fibrofolliculomas,
trichodiscomas, and acrochordons.
• BHDS has an autosomal dominant inheritance with a
mutation on band 17p11.2 that involves a novel BHDS protein
called folliculin.
101. CUTANEOUS SIGNS
• Multiple (10-100) firm papules of face, neck and/or trunk
• Soft pedonculated lesions (acrochordons /skin tags) skin folds
• More than 10 skin lesions (more with age)
• Minimum 1 lesion confirmed as a Fibrofolliculoma
104. SCALP NODULE
• The large nodule from the scalp- Dermal tumor
• Large lobulated nests of basaloid cells arranged in a jig-saw
pattern without attachment to the epidermis
105.
106.
107. • Two cell type- peripheral
cells are small and
basophilic and central cells
are larger and pale stained.
• Small ductal lumina may be
present
109. • Cylindroma is a benign tumour in which apocrine and
trichoepitheliomatous differentiation has been noted
indicating complex hair follicle (folliculo-sebaceous-apocrine)
rather than eccrine differentiation.
110. BROOKE–SPIEGLER SYNDROME
(BSS)
• Brooke–Spiegler syndrome (BSS) ,familial cylindromatosis (FC)
and multiple familial trichoepithelioma (MFT) originally
described as distinct entities, share overlapping clinical findings.
• Patients with BSS are predisposed to multiple skin appendage
tumours such as cylindroma, trichoepithelioma, and
spiradenoma.
• FC, however, is characterised by cylindromas and MFT by
trichoepitheliomas as the only tumour type.
• All three conditions have recently been shown to be allelic.
111. BROOKE–SPIEGLER SYNDROME
(BSS)
• Autosomal dominant disease, with high penetrance, and
penetrance increasing with age, and variable expressivity.
• Female predominance
112. • Predisposition to develop other cutaneous adnexal neoplasms as BCC,
trichoblastomas, follicular cysts, organoid nevi, and malignant transformation
of pre-existing tumors.
• Also patients are at risk for developing tumors of salivary glands, such as
basal-cell adenomas and adenocarcinomas of the parotid glands
Roberto Adrián Retamar, F. Stengel, M. E. Saadi, et, al. Brooke–Spiegler
syndrome – report of four families: treatment with CO 2 laser, International
Journal of Dermatology 2007,46, 583-86.
Putte S. The pathogenesis of familial multiple cylindromas, trichoepitheliomas,
milia, and spiradenomas. Am J Dermatopathol 1995;17: 271-80
113. • This syndrome is caused by mutations in the tumor
suppressor CYLD gene localized to chromosome 16q
114. • The most unusual findings – neoplasms with hybrid features,
such as spiradeno-
cylindromas,spiradenomas,trichoepitheliomas,cylindromatrich
oepitheliomas, and even the concurrence of all three adnexal
tumors in one lesion
• The most common composite tumor was spiradenocylindroma.
115. • Sweat glands are simple tubular glands.
• The secretory tubulus and the initial part of the excretory
duct are coiled into a roughly spherical ball at the border
between the dermis and hypodermis.
• The excretory ducts of merocrine sweat glands empty directly
onto the surface of the skin
116.
117. • The secretory portion is
comprised of larger cells than
the duct.
• simple cuboidal epithelium,
along with
interspersed myoepithelial
cells
• duct or conducting portion of
the tubule- two-
layered stratified cuboidal
epithelium.
120. ECCRINE AND APOCRINE
DIFFERENTIATION
• Adnexal tumours can differentiate towards the ductal and
or/glandular portion of the eccrine or apocrine glands.
• It is not possible to distinguish on histological ground
between the ductal portion of eccrine and apocrine glands.
121. CLUES TO SWEAT GLAND AND
DUCTAL DIFFERENTIATION
• Glandular/duct structures and presence of intracytoplasmic
glandular lumina.
• True ducts and intracytoplasmic lumina can be highlighted by
their diastase-resistant periodic acid-Schiff (PAS), epithelial
membrane antigen (EMA) and carcinoembryonic antigen
positivity. .
• Apocrine differentiation: Characterized by decapitation
secretion - Ductal changes with apocrine snouting.
122. (1) intraglandular duct (2) portions, including the transitional segment
between the two segments; (3), intradermal duct; and (4) and (5),
intraepidermal duct (acrosyringium) comprising the lower sweat duct ridge
(4) and the upper spiralled intraepidermal duct (5).
123.
124. POROMAS
• Originate from the outer cells of the intraepidermal
(acrosyringeal) excretory ducts of eccrine sweat gland.
• The term “poroma” refers to benign adnexal neoplasms with
“poroid” or terminal ductal differentiation.
125. POROMA
Three main benign tumours recognised and distinguished
according to their location in relation to the epidermis
(1) poroma involving both epidermis and dermis
(2) hidroacanthoma simplex, also known as intraepidermal
poroma, confined within the epidermis; and
(3) dermal duct tumour, limited to the dermis, with no
epidermal attachment
126. ECCRINE POROMA
• Solid sheets and nodules of basaloid poroid cells
• Small, monomorphous and polyhedral cuboidal, with well-
defined cell membrane.
• Small, centrally located bland nuclei, and a variable amount
of cytoplasm that ranges from scant to ample, eosinophilic to
clear glycogenated PAS positive and diastase sensitive.
127. • Inconspicuous to prominent CEA-positive small ducts lined by
cuboidal cells, and PAS-positive eosinophilic cuticle material
• Cytoplasmic vacuolation - intracytoplasmic lumen formation -
• Focal sebaceous, pilar and rarely apocrine differentiation may
be identified.
131. Foci of ductal luminal differentiation - small ductal spaces surrounded by
small epithelial cells and covered by eosinophilic lining towards the lumen
were also present
132. • Secretory portion of eccrine and apocrine glands- Cytokeratin
and CAM 5.2
• Luminal aspect of duct- CEA and EMA
• Clear cell change and rarely display small foci of necrosis en
masse.
133.
134. SYRINGOMA
• Syringomas – A spectrum of benign sporadic tumours that
arise from the straight segment of the intradermal eccrine
sweat duct.
• They predominantly affect middle-aged women
• Head and neck region, with a predilection for the eyelids.
135. SYRINGOMA
• Common in patients with Down syndrome.
Clear cell syringoma are commonly associated with diabetes
mellitus.
• Multiple papules on the lower eyelids and cheeks of adolescent
females
136.
137.
138. MICROSCOPY
• Small ducts lined by two layers of cuboidal epithelium
• Ducts have a comma-like tail
• Solid nests and strands of basaloid cells may be present in the
dermis
• Some ducts contain eosinophilic material
139.
140. • Immunohistochemistry:
• Tumour cells CEA in the luminal cells and EMA in the
peripheral cells of the duct.
• ( D/D- CEA is negative in desmoplastic trichoepithelioma).
141.
142. ECCRINE SPIRADENOMAS
• Solitary, gray, pink or blue nodule
• It can be painful, often in paroxysms and tend to arise on
head, neck or the upper part of trunk.
• The histogenesis of spiradenomas remains in question, but
many lesions demonstrate apocrine differentiation.
143. • Large, sharply
circumscribed, basophilic
nodules (“cannon balls” or
“blue balls”)
• Intertwining cords, islands,
or sheets in the dermis
surrounded by a fibrous
capsule
144. • Two types of epithelial cells
(1) cells with small, dense, dark nuclei, generally found at the
periphery of the lobules
(2) cells with large pale, vesicular nuclei located in the central
areas of the lobules.
145. Small rosettes or tubules with lumina sometime containing periodic
acid–Schiff (PAS)-positive and diastase resistant amorphous,
eosinophilic material with scattered lymphocytes
148. • Variusly shaped tumour islands with small and large lumina
are lined by cuboidal ductal cells or columnar secretory cell
149.
150.
151. HIDRADENO
MAS
POROMA SPIRADENOM
A
SYRINGOMA CYLINDROM
A
Dermal
tumour with
grenz zone
Intraepidermal
and dermal
Well
circumscribed
Dermal
tumour
Dermal
tumour
Dermal tumor
with no
attachment to
epidermis
Variably
shaped islands
with solid and
cystic areas
Cords, nests
and islands
Circumcribed
lobules with
basement
membrane
Ducts, solid
nests and
strands
Jigsaw puzzle
pattern
Polyhedral and
round cells
Monomorphic
cells with ovoid
nuclei
Small cells
with dark
nuclei are
present at the
periphery and
the large paler
cells are at the
centre
Two layers of
cuboidal
epithelium
Peripheral
dark cells and
central pale
cells
Ductal
differentiation
and
intracytoplasm
ic lumina
Narrow ductal
lumina
Small lumina
with PASD +
material
Ducts with
comma like
tails and
eosinophilic
material
Small ductal
lumina with
hyaline
droplets
152. HIDROCYSTOMA
• Cysts are lined by two layers of cells.
• The inner layer consists of tall columnar
cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm and
showing decapitation secretion.
• The outer layer consists of myoepithelial
cells.. These granules are PAS positive
and diastase resistant.
• Schöpf-Schulz-Passarge - multiple eyelid
apocrine hidrocystomas, palmo-plantar
keratoderma, hypodontia, hypotrichosis
and nail dystrophy.
153. APOCRINE GLANDS
• Apocrine glands are seen mainly in the axillae, groin, pubic
and perineal regions.
• In contrast with eccrine glands, apocrine glands develop from
an upper bulge in hair follicles
154.
155. • The histological structure of apocrine sweat glands is similar
to that of merocrine sweat glands
• The lumen of the secretory tubulus is much larger and the
secretory epithelium consists of only one major cell type,
which looks cuboidal or low columnar
156.
157. The apical portion of glandular cells shows changes specific for
apocrine secretion, namely, the appearance of being decapitated or
pinched off
158. • The cytoplasm of apocrine glandular cells might contain iron,
which can be illustrated using Prussian blue stain.
• The luminal cells are characteristically immunoreactant to
gross cystic disease fluid protein 15 (GCDFP-15).
• Glands of Moll-eyelid
• Ceruminous glands-external auditory canal
160. • as one papule or several
papules in a linear
arrangement, or as a solitary
plaque
161. Raised nodular lesion comprised of multiple cystic, papillary and ductal
invaginations extending into the dermis. Papillary projections are clearly
162. The epithelium showed double layers of cells consisting of an inner layer of cuboidal cells
and an outer luminal layer of tall columnar cells.
Decapitation secretion was seen in the luminal layer..
163. •Mononuclear inflammatory infiltrates
consisting of mainly plasma cells in the fibrous
tissue of the papillary projections
•Positive staining in the luminal cells for alcian
blue, colloidal iron, and periodic acid-Schiff
(PAS), which is diastase resistant.
•Positivity for immunohistochemical staining of
gross cystic disease fluid protein 15 (GCDFP-
15; BRST 2), Leu-M1 antigen (CD 15),
lysozymes, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA),
and epithelial membrane antigen (EMA)
164. HIDRADENOMA PAPILLIFERUM
• Almost always located in the vulval or perianal regions.
• Ectopic lesions have been reported on the face, scalp, eyelid,
auditory canal and arm.
166. • There are two types of epithelium - tall columnar cells with
pale eosinophilic cytoplasm and underlying myoepithelial cell
layer.
• Prominent apocrine changes are noted in areas.
• The differential diagnosis includes adenocarcinoma.
167.
168. • PAS positive diastase-
resistant granules are
present in the apices of the
large cells
169. • Sebaceous glands are as a rule simple and branched
• The secretory portion consists of alveoli. Basal cells in the
outermost layer of the alveolus- flattened and mitotically
active.
• Mature sebocytes—cells with a centrally-located, often
scalloped or indented nucleus and multivacuolated cytoplasm
due to the accumulation of lipid secretions
170.
171. SEBACEOUS LESIONS OF THE
SKIN
Ectopic Sebaceous Glands:
• Fordyce's spot
Hamartomas and Hyperplasias:
• Folliculosebaceous Cystic Hamartoma
• Steatocystoma
• Nevus Sebaceous of Jadassohn
• Sebaceous Hyperplasia
Benign:
• Sebaceous Adenoma
• Sebaceoma
Malignant:
• Sebaceous Carcinoma
172. • The presence of cells with
coarsely vacuolated
cytoplasm and starry nuclei
(mulberry cells)
173. • Ductal structures lined by
crenulated corneocytes - thin
cornifying squamous
epithelium with a barely
detectable granular zone
• Corneocytes - arranged
compactly, and its luminal
border with distinctive
crenulations.
175. • Sebaceous neoplasms - potential to arise from any sebaceous
gland in the body.
• They have the greatest predilection for the nose, eyelids, and
other areas with abundant sebaceous glands
176. • Five or more lobules of
bland, immature sebocytes
that open into a single
dilated follicular
infundibulum
• The peripheries of the
lobules have one or two cell
layers of basaloid
germinative cells.
177.
178. • A multilobulated tumour sharply demarcated from the
surrounding tissue.
• Two types of cells are present in the lobules.
• The large mature sebaceous cells (sebocytes) are present at
the centre.
• Smaller, undifferentiated basaloid cells in the periphery
179.
180. • Sebaceous adenoma - 50% or more of the cells are sebocytes.
• Ductal structures with holocrine secretion, which may result
in occasional cystic degeneration or formation of intralesional
cysts
181. Basaloid neoplasms with aggregations of basaloid cells
admixed with sebocytes and sebaceous duct-like structures
• Trichoblastoma
• Apocrine poroma
• Basal cell carcinoma
182. MUIR-TORRE SYNDROME (MTS)
• In 1967, Muir and Torre each reported patients with multiple
cutaneous tumors along with visceral malignancies.
• Muir-Torre syndrome (MTS)- sebaceous neoplasms of the skin
and a visceral malignancy (usually gastrointestinal or
genitourinary carcinomas).
• Autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance in 59% of cases
with high degree of penetrance and variable expression.
183. !!QA
• MTS - germline mutation in one or more of the DNA
mismatch repair(MMR) genes.
• MTS-associated sebaceous neoplasms reveal mutations in
DNA mismatchrepair (MMR) genes and microsatellite
instability.
• Phenotypic variant, the hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal
cancer (HNPCC)
184. • Criteria for the diagnosis of MTS-
• At least one sebaceous neoplasm (either sebaceous adenoma,
sebaceous epithelioma, or sebaceous carcinoma; while
sebaceous hyperplasia and nevus sebaceus of Jadassohn are
generally excluded)
• At least one visceral cancer.
185. SEBACEOUS ADENOMA Most characteristic papule or
Benign tumour- yellow papule or nodule
Face, scalp, trunk
SEBACEOUS CARCINOMA Malignant tumour- eyelids
Yellow nodule with ulceration
Metastasis and death
KERATOACANTHOMA Solitary or multiple
Red papule that rapidly grows to become
a skin-coloured, shiny nodule with
telangiectases and a central horny plug
covered by a crust
186. • exoendophytic, symmetrical lesion characterized by
deep bulbous lobules of keratinizing well
differentiated squamous epithelium with central
keratin filled crater.
• There is marked acanthosis with hyperkeratosis and
little or no parakeratosis.
Cells in the centre of the tumour have a
"glassy" appearance.
• There is lipping of edges of normal epidermis that
extends over the central keratinous crater.
187. • One visceral malignancy or multiple primary malignancies at
different sites.
• The most common visceral malignancies - colorectal followed
by genitourinary.
• Colon carcinoma - proximal to the splenic flexure
188. S
• Less common malignancies- breast carcinoma, hematological
disorders, endometrial carcinoma, and rarely gastric
carcinoma
• Patients typically present at earlier age with malignancy
189. SEBACEOUS ADENOMA IN MTS
• Sebaceous adenoma - most characteristic marker of MTS. .
• In the sporadic cases, - head (particularly on the face, the
scalp, and the eyelids),.
• In MTS, lesions on the trunk may be more common.
• The Muir-Torre variant of sebaceous adenoma - more
prominent cystic change, peripheral-disposed basaloid,
germinative-type cells, often with mild nuclear pleomorphism,
distinct nucleoli, and moderate mitotic activity.
190. • Sebaceous neoplasms with a
keratoacanthoma-like
pattern probably only occur
in the context of Muir-Torre
syndrome
191. Cystic sebaceous neoplasms have been
seen only in patients with Muir-Torre
syndrome (MTS) and have recently been
characterized as marker lesions of MTS
192. • The occurrence of sebaceous neoplasms in the general
population is rare.
• marker for MTS and should prompt a screening for visceral
malignancy
• With the exception of sebaceous carcinomas, sebaceous
neoplasms associated with MTS are typically of low malignant
potential.
193. • Recognizing the presence of sebaceous neoplasms can help
identify patients with Muir-Torre syndrome
• Early treatment of an associated occult malignancy may be
started.
194. Loss of nuclear staining for MLH-1 or MSH-2
is highly suggestive of the syndrome
195.
196. SEBACEOMA
• Sebaceoma
• Irregular shaped cell masses in which more than 50 percent
cells are undifferentiated, basaloid cells together with
significant aggregates of sebaceous cells and transitional cells.
197.
198.
199. • The diagnostic criteria for sebaceous carcinomas are
1. silhouette of malignancy (asymmetry, poor circumscription,
and marked variance in size and shape of the neoplastic
aggregations)
2. severe nuclear atypia with frequent mitoses
3. Both seen in the basaloid neoplasms with sebaceous
differentiation.
200.
201.
202. Immunohistochemical Distinction of Ocular Sebaceous Carcinoma From Basal
Cell and Squamous Cell Carcinoma FREE
John H. Sinard, MD, PhD
Arch Ophthalmol. 1999;117(6):776-783. doi:10.1001/archopht.117.6.77
203. • EMA immunoperoxidase staining - best supplemental test (in
addition to careful scrutiny of conventional sections) for
confirmation of sebaceous differentiation.
• Positive reaction - EMA labeling of cytoplasm in a coarsely
vacuolated pattern.
204.
205. • EMA, S-100 protein, and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)-
differentiation between sebaceous and sweat gland neoplasms
in most instances, the former staining positive for EMA, while
S-100 protein and CEA decorate sweat gland epithelium
206. REFERENCES
• WHO-Skin tumours
• Skin adnexal neoplasms—part 1: An approach to tumours of
the pilosebaceous unit K O Alsaad, N A Obaidat, D Ghazarian
Clin Pathol 2007;60:129–144. doi: 10.1136/jcp.2006.040337
• Skin adnexal neoplasms—part 2: An approach to tumours of
cutaneous sweat glands Nidal A Obaidat, Khaled O Alsaad,
Danny Ghazarian
J Clin Pathol 2007;60:145–159. doi: 10.1136/jcp.2006.041608