TY - JOUR
T1 - Benign Biphasic Tumors of the Mullerian Tract - a Mimic of Phyllodes Tumor. A Clinical-Pathologic Description of 21 Cases
AU - Wawire, Jonathan
AU - Sung, C. James
AU - Quddus, M. Ruhul
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 by the Association of Clinical Scientists, Inc.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Objective. A review of the clinical-pathologic characteristics and outcomes of biphasic polyps occurring in the female genital tract, not meeting the diagnostic criteria of Mullerian Adenosarcoma (MA). Methods. An archival database search was run, after IRB approval, between 2001 and 2019, using terminology such as “Mullerian adenofibroma, ” “atypical Mullerian adenofibroma, ” “polypoid adenofibroma, ” and “atypical polyp with increased stromal cellularity.” Two pathologists (JW and MRQ) reviewed all the retrieved cases and documented the morphologic features with particular emphasis on the presence of any features of Mullerian adenosarcoma. Follow-up data were also abstracted. Results. Twenty-one cases, 12 cervical and 9 endometrial lesions, constituted the study cohort. Patients ranged from 26 to 64 years (median 49 years). On review, 20 of 21 of those cases showed Phyllodes-like architectural patterns. However, only one case showed all four features of MA, all of which were focal and inconspicuous. Follow-up (median duration of 5 years) did not document any recurrences in any of the 21 cases after excision. Conclusion. This series adds to the growing body of literature affirming the existence of benign biphasic Mullerian polyps encountered in the endometrium and cervix that fall short of the Mullerian adenosarcoma diagnosis.
AB - Objective. A review of the clinical-pathologic characteristics and outcomes of biphasic polyps occurring in the female genital tract, not meeting the diagnostic criteria of Mullerian Adenosarcoma (MA). Methods. An archival database search was run, after IRB approval, between 2001 and 2019, using terminology such as “Mullerian adenofibroma, ” “atypical Mullerian adenofibroma, ” “polypoid adenofibroma, ” and “atypical polyp with increased stromal cellularity.” Two pathologists (JW and MRQ) reviewed all the retrieved cases and documented the morphologic features with particular emphasis on the presence of any features of Mullerian adenosarcoma. Follow-up data were also abstracted. Results. Twenty-one cases, 12 cervical and 9 endometrial lesions, constituted the study cohort. Patients ranged from 26 to 64 years (median 49 years). On review, 20 of 21 of those cases showed Phyllodes-like architectural patterns. However, only one case showed all four features of MA, all of which were focal and inconspicuous. Follow-up (median duration of 5 years) did not document any recurrences in any of the 21 cases after excision. Conclusion. This series adds to the growing body of literature affirming the existence of benign biphasic Mullerian polyps encountered in the endometrium and cervix that fall short of the Mullerian adenosarcoma diagnosis.
KW - Biphasic tumor
KW - Cervical polyp
KW - Endometrial polyp
KW - Mullerian adenofibroma
KW - Mullerian adenosarcoma
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85168726283&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Article
C2 - 37625832
AN - SCOPUS:85168726283
SN - 0091-7370
VL - 53
SP - 641
EP - 646
JO - Annals of Clinical and Laboratory Science
JF - Annals of Clinical and Laboratory Science
IS - 4
ER -